#boot-strap paradox
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aklingolgesi · 1 year ago
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ZAMAN YOLCULUĞU PARADOKSLARI | FELSEFİ VE MANTIKİ AÇIDAN ZAMAN YOLCULUĞU
Bir anda kendinizi 1300’lü yılların ortasında bulmak ister miydiniz? Ya da siber savaşların yaşandığı bir gelecekte? Evet, oldukça kritik bir konu: zaman yolculuğu. Peki, zaman yolculuğu mantıksal açıdan mümkün olabilir mi yoksa zamanda yolculuk kavramı doğrudan kendisiyle mi çelişir? Zaman yolculuğuyla alakalı nasıl paradokslar var? Zaman yolculuğu yapmak nasıl problemlere sebep olacaktır? Gelin…
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krafterwrites · 1 year ago
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Honestly all of the Chaos Emeralds' roles in 06 are pretty cool (except for the red emerald bc it doesn't appear at all until the last story lmao), it's definitely the most interesting way they've been weaved into the story of a game
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daydreaming-memories · 1 year ago
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because of how daycosm 3 is, the major thing is "they're HOW old? It's been HOW long???"
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pitch-and-moan · 1 year ago
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Recursive Laces
A time traveler, realizing the importance of idiotically simple ideas on the future, sets out to shape his reality by carefully inserting simple ideas into earlier eras. But while he can account for generally where an idea first took hold, things like saddles and stirrups are so ubiquitous over millennia require some trial and error to figure out when precisely to introduce them. He figures it has to be after widespread adoption of certain things (saddles have to come after the domestication of horses, for example) but finding the right person to drop an idea on and when becomes a matter of some effort. He decides to start with a seemingly obvious idea: boot straps. Most of the film is him going back in time to prevent himself from trying to give boot straps to someone who hasn't yet come up with boots, or after the invention of boots but before they're commonly used.
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antheyaaa · 2 months ago
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guys anon is back!!
i LIIIIVE for metalhead reader x cal 🙏🙏 you wrote that so amazingly
can we gettttt cal who’s lowkey obsessed with readers style? and that’s what makes him start dressing the way he does?
"Paint It Black (and Silver)"
Calvin Gabriel x reader
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Cal never thought much about fashion. For him, clothes were purely functional—a hoodie thrown over a t-shirt, jeans that didn't rip at the knees, and some well-worn sneakers. He liked simplicity, predictability. That is, until you walked into his life like a storm wearing combat boots.
The first time he saw you, you were leaning against the brick wall behind the school gym, music blasting from your earbuds loud enough that he could recognize the scream of guitars even from a distance. You wore a leather jacket that looked like it had been through war—patched, painted, and pinned within an inch of its life. Your fingers were adorned with chunky silver rings, and your boots? They looked like they could kick through concrete. You were intimidating and captivating all at once.
And Cal was fascinated.
He started finding excuses to sit closer to you in class. You always smelled faintly like smoke and incense, and the black eyeliner around your eyes was never quite symmetrical—something he weirdly found endearing. You doodled band logos in the margins of your notebook and hummed riffs while solving equations. You were a walking paradox: intense, yet soft when you smiled at him.
One afternoon, you caught him staring at the Iron Maiden patch on your sleeve. Instead of getting annoyed, you smirked and said, "You listen to them?"
"Uh... not really," he admitted. "But... I might. If you recommend something."
That simple exchange snowballed into shared playlists, burned CDs, and late-night texts discussing music, style, and everything in between. He started listening to your favorite bands on loop, memorizing lyrics he didn’t yet fully understand. And slowly, imperceptibly, he began to change.
The first time he wore a black band tee—one you'd given him after teasing him for owning nothing but plain clothes—you whistled low and said, "Damn, Cal. You're starting to look like trouble."
He laughed but blushed, clutching his backpack strap. "Good kind of trouble, I hope."
You nodded. "The best kind."
Weeks passed, and his style evolved. He started wearing rings, painting his nails (poorly at first, until you showed him the trick), and even tried eyeliner one night before a party. When you saw him there, standing by the drink table in a black denim jacket with a Slayer patch stitched on the back, your heart did a weird somersault.
"You did this for me?" you asked, tugging at the sleeve.
He shrugged, cheeks pink. "I guess I just like your style. Makes me feel... like I can be more than just 'safe Cal.'"
You took his hand, fingers tracing the silver ring on his thumb.
"You never needed the look, Cal. But damn, you make it work."
You kissed him that night, with the music thundering in the background, and his hand curled around your waist. He tasted like nervous energy and mint gum, and you knew right then: this boy didn’t just fall for you. He fell into your world, and he was making it his own.
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Hey, I'm sorry I wasn't there and I was behind with your requests but I was sick and literally had no strength for anything. I'm still sick but I feel better now so I'll be posting everything I can now. I don't know much about this style but I hope that's what you wanted and that you'll like it💞
With love-Antheya
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megalizardon4736 · 11 months ago
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Cassandra Goth Makeover ❤
Hair -
cassandra hair and bows by okruee
cypress hair by okruee
Amaya Hairstyle by simcelebrity00 (thesimsresource)
Eyebrows -
MM N18 Dolce by PralineSims
Eyes -
3D Eyelashes No.2 by TwistedCat
Skin Details -
[Ancenth] 2PM Eyes by ancenth
Eyebags by Tamo
Clavicle Overlay by Sunivaa
moomoo blush by squeamishsims
misc. face details by okruee
philtrum transparent by obscurus-sims
nose tip mask by obscurus-sims
TOPAZ face highlight by nesurii
Lower Eyelids N2 MM Overlay by northern siberia winds
Makeup -
Wedding Makeup eyeshadow by TwistedCat
Soft Glam Lips by TwistedCat
Prism Lipstick by TwistedCat
Limelight Eyeshadow by TwistedCat
Margot Eyeliner by PralineSims
Glisten Lipstick by PLUMBHEAD
Eyeliner 06 by Kijiko
Passionfruit Liner by crypticsim
Darling Blush by crypticsim
Clothes -
Dark Delight Necklace by Madlen
Bayonetta Glasses by caio
Hikaru Top by marsmerizingsims
Birdie Skirt by ImVikai
Wedding Nails by Zeussim
Macrame Necklace by Simandy
Bridesmaid Dress by Joliebean
Carmen Earrings by Joliebean
Marie Bow Pumps by Sentate
Tiffany Bracelet by Sentate
Opium Tee by Sentate
Morning Pants by Simandy
Simberleen 2020 tights by Trillyke
Goncharov Top by Simandy
cullottes pants by okruee
Luna Dress by Sentate
Diana Bikini Top and Bottom by ice-creamforbreakfast
V2 - Nitro Pallette Paradox Glasses by PralineSims
Angel Eyes Frilly Lace Socks by Trillyke
Crush Ankle Strap Boots by Trillyke
Chisai Shoes by Simandy
Esmerelda Body Suit by RenoraSims
Love Dive Shorts by Trillyke
Kai Bracelet Bulky by oydis
Kali Slides by serenity
Natla Jacket by Sentate
Hibiscus Accessory Shirt by Solistair
Bite Me Cargo Pants by Trillyke
Rae Scarf by clumsyalien
Bubbly Snow Boots by RenoraSims
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abyssmalice · 6 months ago
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𝟑-𝟓 𝐓𝐇𝐈𝐍𝐆𝐒 𝐘𝐎𝐔𝐑 𝐌𝐔𝐒𝐄 𝐂𝐀𝐍 𝐄𝐀𝐒𝐈𝐋𝐘 𝐁𝐄 𝐈𝐃𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐈𝐅𝐈𝐄𝐃 𝐁𝐘.
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𝐂𝐎𝐋𝐎𝐑𝐒:
███ - light brown
███  -  royal blue
███ - white-silver
███ - bright gold
███ - blood red
𝐒𝐂𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐒:
an artificial sweetness - a light but persistent aroma that is flowery, sugary, and rich in feeling; a combination of things like roses, strawberries and vanilla, that can only be found in quality soaps and perfumes.
irminsul - very faint, earthly yet otherworldly; a "dusty" scent that feels "instinctively unusual".
blood - underneath everything, hidden to all but the best of noses that will still struggle; no amount of perfume and scrubbing can completely wash away a murderer's trade.
𝐅𝐀𝐒𝐇𝐈𝐎𝐍:
overall, a wardrobe that is simple but sharply-tailored - put together, the fanciful image of a student at a private academy.
pieces of military gear - combat boots, leather gloves, hidden straps for tools and knives.
subtle details that weave a rich and powerful association - expensive fabrics, gold trims, intricate lace, hand-stitching, etc.
other details hinting at girlish youth - a few ribbons, flowers, bows, etc. that are carefully woven into her attire as to not stand out, but are nonetheless there.
simplistic but strong color palettes - alternating between the Fatui's bold but solemn schema of blue-gold-white or red-black-grey.
𝐎𝐁𝐉𝐄𝐂𝐓𝐒:
a fake Vision - Cryo, Snezhnayan-casing, worn as a brooch and decorated with ribbons and leyline blooms.
a Harbinger mask - red, sharp, with the vague silhouette of a heart; it's always worn on the side of her head.
a knife - old, ornamental, still-sharp; it doesn't belong to any of the reigning nations in design or origin, and she prefers to keep it on her person as memorabilia than a tool.
𝐁𝐎𝐃𝐘 𝐋𝐀𝐍𝐆𝐔𝐀𝐆𝐄:
arms almost always folded, expression almost always leaning towards displeased or unreadable - an instinctive sense of being defensive or disdainful, cautious or closed-off.
a mixed thrum of impatience and vigilance - tapping feet, hawkish staring, constant head-turning, a stance that is always ready to be on the move, etc.
but at the same time, there is a paradoxical stillness to her - she has been strongly conditioned to stay within a very, very small radius of space, unless the situation mandates otherwise; hence, even when looking around or fidgeting, she remains in the exact same spot throughout.
𝐀𝐄𝐒𝐓𝐇𝐄𝐓𝐈𝐂𝐒:
the idea of a naive girl's fancies - cake and candy and ribbons and toys, in cool pastels or cheerful colors or bright tones.
the tragedy of dolls - delicate, lovely, beloved; condemned to be soulless on the inside, no matter how alive they look on the outside.
a knife gripped hard in the hand; it leaves a sharp splatter of warm blood on the cold snow.
the peace and silence inside an empty coffin.
something innocent is there in that dark corner - staring with a blank gaze, standing like a sign of danger instead.
tagged by: its free meme economy!!!!!!!! tagging:   U
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ronak-tolke · 6 months ago
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So I have been learning a huge chunk of Omniscient Readers Viewpoint through a guy on YouTube and I understand the whole 51% 49% thing and all that but next sentence is spoilers by the way in the later chapters of the series we learned that Kim Dokja has to take the splitting himself into a version with forty nine percent and fifty one percent keeping the fifty one as the oldest dream and the forty nine is the one that goes through the plot of ORV then at some point one of his friends is sent to the past before three ways to survive a apocalypse was written by TLS123 only able to control her younger body while her younger self slept searching for the author of TWSA eventually unable to find them as the book never released but then a young Kim Dokja tries to commit suicide realizing the novel is needed to ensure his survival she writes it and now I’m convinced there was no original oldest dream or writer of TWSA it’s literally a boot strap paradox either that or I’m misunderstanding and multiple versions of the same person can exist in the timeline feel free to correct me
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wraith-of-thiodolf · 1 year ago
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imagine talking about the boot-strap paradox in a franchise that doesnt even have time-travel
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mildlyinterestedcreature · 1 year ago
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This is my lovely grandfather, Paradox and the beautiful straps of his boots
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fatalpoison4u · 1 year ago
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Temporal Paradox: A temporal paradox, time paradox, or time travel paradox is a paradox, an apparent contradiction, or logical contradiction associated with the idea of time and time travel.Causal loop: A causal loop is a paradox of time travel that occurs when a future event is the cause of a past event, which in turn is the cause of the future event. Both events then exist in spacetime, but their origin cannot be determined. A causal loop may involve an event, a person or object, or information. The terms boot-strap paradox, predestination paradox or ontological paradox are sometimes used in fiction to refer to a causal loop.
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The use of "bootstrap" in this context refers to the expression "pulling yourself up by your bootstraps" and to Robert A. Heinlein's time travel story "By His Bootstraps".
Self-consistency principle: The Novikov self-consistency principle, named after Igor Dmitrievich Novikov, states that any actions taken by a time traveler or by an object that travels back in time were part of history all along, and therefore it is impossible for the time traveler to "change" history in any way. The Novikov self-consistency principle proposes that the local laws of physics in a region of spacetime containing time travelers cannot be any different from the local laws of physics in any other region of spacetime. Novikov's views are not widely accepted. Visser views causal loops and Novikov's self-consistency principle as an ad hoc solution and supposes that there are far more damaging implications of time travel. Krasnikov similarly finds no inherent fault in causal loops, but finds other problems with time travel in general relativity.
The term predestination paradox is used in the Star Trek franchise to mean "a time loop in which a time traveler who has gone into the past causes an event that ultimately causes the original future version of the person to go back into the past." Although the phrase had been used previously to refer to belief systems such as Calvinism and some forms of Marxism that encouraged followers to strive to produce certain outcomes while at the same time teaching that the outcomes were predetermined. Smeenk and Morgenstern use the term "predestination paradox" to refer specifically to situations in which a time traveler goes back in time to try to prevent some event in the past, but ends up helping to cause that same event. Stories involving predestination paradoxes often involve a heavy sense of irony -- the time traveler might go back in time in order to change something, but his or her actions inadvertently lead to the exact situation that inspired the time traveler to have gone back and changed things. Thus, nothing ultimately changes.
The Object Loop: An object from the future is sent into the past, takes The Slow Path back to the future, and then gets sent back into the past again, in the same way, for the same purpose. For example, you travel to the past and sell a pair of antique glasses you got from a friend, who inherited them from his grandfather, who bought them from you, the time traveler. This time loop results in several important physics problems, such as: Where did the glasses come from in the first place? The glasses have literally sprung into existence from nothing, appearing to violate the law of conservation of energy/mass. In one common variation, information loops, rather than physical objects: for instance, an engineer from the future gives the formula for transparent aluminum to its historical "inventor", becoming the creator of a metal that has always existed. The actual effect of this variation is that no one invented the object, or no one discovered the formula/concept. It's just there. A 1992 paper by physicists Andrei Lossev and Igor Novikov labeled such items without origin as Jinn, with the singular term Jinnee.  This terminology was inspired by the Jinn of the Quran, which are described as leaving no trace when they disappear. Lossev and Novikov allowed the term "Jinn" to cover both objects and information with reflexive origin; they called the former "Jinn of the first kind", and the latter "Jinn of the second kind".
A bootstrap paradox involving a person could be, say, a 20-year-old male time traveler who goes back 21 years, meets a woman, has an affair, and returns home three months later without knowing the woman was pregnant. Her child grows up to be the 20-year-old time traveler, who travels back 21 years through time, meets a woman, and so on.
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American science fiction writer Robert Heinlein wrote a strange short story involving a sexual paradox in his 1959 classic “All You Zombies“.
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Examples of bootstrap paradoxes in books include Michael Moorcock’s ‘Behold The Man’, Tim Powers’ The Anubis Gates.Grandfather paradox: The consistency paradox or grandfather paradox occurs when the past is changed in any way, thus creating a contradiction. If a time traveler were ever to go back in time and kill their grandfather in his childhood, it would result in one of the time traveler's parents, and ergo the time traveler, not being born. If the time traveler were not born, then it would not be possible for them to kill the grandfather in the first place. Therefore, the grandfather lives to offspring the time traveler's parents, and therefore the time traveler. More generally, this means doing something that makes your time travel impossible or unnecessary. For instance, if success in the time travel endeavor means that the condition you set out to change never happens, then you won't ever have had any reason to come back and try to change it. Thus, without your intervention, it will happen after all, meaning you then must go back to change it, meaning you don't have to, meaning you have to, and so on, ad infinitum. There is, thus no predicted outcome to this. Consistency paradoxes occur whenever changing the past is possible. A possible resolution is that a time traveler can do anything that did happen, but cannot do anything that did not happen. Doing something that did not happen results in a contradiction. Alternately, this whole snafu can be ignored outright if you're using Alternate Universe-style time travel, where the time period you came from is separate from (and unaffected by) any meddling you do in the past. The downside to this is that returning "home" might be a tricky matter....
Basically, the Grandfather paradox conveys the idea of a self-correcting universe and/or fixed points in time. Even if you were able to go back in time and, I don’t know, shoot your Grandpa in the head before he ever meets your Grandma, your Grandfather would turn out to be an early sperm donor or something, who would still manage even posthumously to impregnate your Grandmother, because you would have to exist in order to have shot him in the head in the first place.
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Example of the Grandfather Paradox in books include The Grandfather Paradox by Steven Burgauer, and the graphic novel I Killed Adolf Hitler by Jason.Polchinski’s Paradox: American theoretical physicist Joseph Polchinski proposed a time paradox scenario in which a billiard ball enters a wormhole, and emerges out the other end in the past just in time to collide with its younger version and stop it going into the wormhole in the first place. Polchinski’s paradox is taken seriously by physicists, as there is nothing in Einstein’s General Relativity to rule out the possibility of time travel, closed time-like curves (CTCs), or tunnels through space-time. Furthermore, it has the advantage of being based upon the laws of motion, without having to refer to the indeterministic concept of free will, and so presents a better research method for scientists to think about the paradox. When Joseph Polchinski proposed the paradox, he had Novikov’s Self-Consistency Principle in mind, which basically states that while time travel is possible, time paradoxes are forbidden. However, a number of solutions have been formulated to avoid the inconsistencies Polchinski suggested, which essentially involves the billiard ball delivering a blow that changes its younger version’s course, but not enough to stop it from entering the wormhole. This solution is related to the ‘timeline-protection hypothesis’ which states that a probability distortion would occur in order to prevent a paradox from happening. This also helps explain why if you tried to time travel and murder your grandfather, something will always happen to make that impossible, thus preserving a consistent version of history.Butterfly effect: The butterfly effect is the notion that small events can have large, widespread consequences. The term describes events observed in chaos theory where a very small change in initial conditions results in vastly different outcomes. The term was coined by mathematician Edward Lorenz years after the phenomenon was first described. The butterfly effect has found its way into popular imagination.
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For example, in Ray Bradbury's 1952 short story A Sound of Thunder, the killing of a single insect millions of years in the past drastically changes the world.The premise of the butterfly effect as it relates to time travel is that whenever you travel backwards in time and alter anything, it has the potential to forever alter the future in unforeseeable ways. The farther you go back in time, the more evident these effects are upon returning to the present. For example, if you went back one day in time and stepped on a butterfly, the change once returning to the present would not be that significant. However, traveling millions or even thousands of years into the past would drastically affect the present upon return.
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In Orpheus With Clay Feet by Philip K. Dick, the main character, Jesse Slade, enlists in the services of a time travel tourism agency, who set him up with a trip that allows him to go back in time and act as a muse for some significant historical figure. Slade chooses to go back and inspire his favorite science fiction writer Jack Dowland (which was also Dick’s pen name). Unfortunately, in his efforts to inspire Dowland’s monumental science fiction work, Slade directly reveals to Dowland that he is a time traveler hoping to inspire his work. Dowland takes this as an insulting ruse, and as a result, never becomes the great science fiction writer that he is meant to be. He does, however, publish a single science short story, under the pen name Philip K. Dick: a story called Orpheus With Clay Feet, about a time traveler that goes back in time to inspire his favorite science fiction writer, a man named Jack Dowland.
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"Aristotle and the Gun" by L. Sprague de Camp, Woman on the Edge of TimeFermi paradox: The Fermi paradox can be adapted for time travel, and phrased "if time travel were possible, where are all the visitors from the future?" Answers vary, from time travel not being possible, to the possibility that visitors from the future cannot reach any arbitrary point in the past, or that they disguise themselves to avoid detection.
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puppygirlinadream · 7 months ago
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I'm sorry can you explain what "boot strap paradox" and "murder fucking" mean?
I am so confused
tgirl ensuring her own existence by bootstrap paradox murderfucking the boy she used to be in a way that forces him to realize what's supposed to happen
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the-dead-lords · 2 years ago
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There is a single easter egg that is hidden in the physics outside of the laws of physical reality.
Like the self editing boot strap paradox.
When you see it you will know it.
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mmmmalo · 3 years ago
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Saw while searching that the term "boot" came from the notion of pulling yourself up by your boot straps, referring to the seeming paradox of a computer jumpstarting its software with software
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derekscorner · 3 years ago
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I finished Skyward Sword
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I finally forced myself to tackle this due to the HD version and it’s taken me...a while. I did give motion a try just because it’s been a decade but I still hate it. I then dedicated to the controller option but quickly found that I hated it as well.
This game truly was infuriating to play. I don’t intend to play this again which is a bit painful to say when you cling to Zelda for 20+ years. In fact, I hated the actual gameplay so bad I won’t even break it down.
I’ll just relive the highlights instead~
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Adorable
Gameplay sucked but the characters truly did not. Link & Zelda are adorable, Impa loyal, and by hell Groose became a good boy. He deserves his Legend of Groose, the SS fans are right.
The story was neither too grand nor was it anywhere near bad so I can’t really add much to that. I mostly found myself enjoying the characters or theories the game forces into your head.
Play enough LoZ titles and you spend a good portion of your SS adventure just pondering things. Like the robots, the nature of Hyrule’s world when Hylia walked it’s surface, or the freakin time stones.
If you’re new to Zelda or reading this out of curiosity just know that Hyrule is freakishly old. The actual country, the land ruled by the royal family, the very fruit this specific Zelda’s loin is immeasurably old.
So take that info and then expand it with Skyloft. The hylians were in Skyloft for an untold number of centuries. You then take that nugget and fall into my level of the fandom well and wonder how the world before Skyloft was.
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Goddess of Time?
There was a whole technology based world with a god, multiple actually, wandering about. Dragons, spirits, magic, that world prior to Demise’s invasion must’ve been a sight to explore.
It also makes me wonder just how old the golden goddesses are to be called “old gods” by even Zelda herself. SS Zelda is a literal god reborn mortal. That first Zelda had those memories by the end of the game. Yet even she considered them freakin old.
Or there’s the mystery of Hylia herself. Between her making time gates, the later creation of the Ocarina of Time from a Timeshift Stone, her plan that spanned timelines, etc.
I think it’s fair to say of the gods listed in the series over the years that Hylia likely is the goddess of time mentioned in Majora’s Mask. Especially when her messages begin with her stating she’s watching from “the edge of time”.
Hell, while I’m rambling about the nice things, I loved that effect of the desert being water. I hated to actually drive the boat but the very act of a time stone turning dried ocean back into water was cool.
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Wind Fish???
Then there was this f*cker! He’s like the mix of the Wind Fish (link’s awakening) and the leviathan bones (botw). Is he the wind fish? Are they kin? Are leviathans just dead fish gods!? I HAVE SO MANY QUESTIONS.
Though I think my biggest question is Demise’s defeat. People will play it off as a boot strap paradox but it’s..kinda not....hmm maybe it is. I’d like to argue that Demise dying in the past AFTER he was killed in the present should’ve split time but LoZ is a bit finicky with time travel.
It’s used more often than you’d expect but each use of it affects time differently. That alone tells you that time can be malleable or consistent but it depends entirely on the method or item used.
Such as the harp from Oracle of Ages. Your actions in the past alter the present and future areas.
Skyward Sword Link uses the stones and time gate to warp things. The tree of life being the biggest example.
Then there’s the titular Hero of Time himself. Perhaps Link’s most iconic time traveling incarnation. Time within Ocarina of Time is actually fixed. What you do in the past affects adult Link’s future. Time doesn’t “break” into two timelines until the ending of the game.
A break that only comes about due to Zelda’s own actions. She sent Link back in time, kept the ocarina, while Link put the sword back to rest. That event broke the self consistency of Ocarina of Time creating parallel worlds.
There’s also other minor things you can mention but these are bigger key examples. Time basically reacts based on the thing altering or traversing it. And if Hylia is indeed the god of time itself then I could easily buy Demise’s dual death being confined to a paradox.
What better way to kill a threat that big than to physically erase him from two eras?
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DA SWORD
Ah I should mention Fi. It goes without saying that I didn’t find her too annoying but I should also remind any reader that this is by design. Nintendo purposely reduced the number of times she was a nuisance. Her annoyance was just that great in the original version of the game.
If anything I felt more indifferent too her. It’s a bit sad but I guess she’s doomed to be found annoying or “whatever” going by my personal standards. And I’ll even throw out a random one and say that I actually feel a bit guilty about it.
Fi is the sword. She’s our sword. The same damn thing we track down nearly every series entry. If you’ve played LoZ long enough you have some semblance of a view that the Master Sword is “my sword”.
I’d like to feel more endeared to her. Even while asleep she continually answers Link’s call. Each.And.Every.Time.
The game also did give me the feeling I was forging the sword. It wasn’t much but I appreciate that little feeling. Hylia made it but we forged it.
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The End
I hated the gameplay, I hated most of the bosses even more, but the story was decent and the characters cute. Even with Link’s uncanny valley face. (he does fine when emoting but that blank stare...good God)
I wish I could add more detail to my rambling but I’m sleepy, I finally finished this, and I’m trying to get down what thoughts I can before I pass out. Hopefully I amused you if you’ve gotten this far. Bye~
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retrowitchinghour · 2 months ago
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The doctor introduces her by her full name when they meet him when he was a kid
Love a good boot strap paradox !
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How THE FUCK does Conrad know Belinda?
And that’s she’s important??
And he’s the reason why the Doctor is so interested in her!!! Bc the Doctor loves a good puzzle, even if said puzzle is an actual human being.
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