#series: code zero
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no-celebration · 2 months ago
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While I don't post about Resident Evil a whole lot, it's still my favorite video game series of all time. This is great news! Can't wait to see what Capcom comes up with next! (please give us a Code Veronica remake already 😭)
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doggendoodle · 2 years ago
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do i have this right
edit: turns out i missed a few
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pokerharem · 5 months ago
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Shadow
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thekombuchagirl · 8 months ago
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CODE ZERO
Series Masterlist
P A R T S:
Part I
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Part II
coming soon
For taglist*, reply to this post or dm!
*there must be mention of your age anywhere on your blog
This story is not intended for minors. Over the internet I cannot make someone abide by the guidelines but the recommended age for all chapters of the story is 18+. If you are a minor and you still choose to read this work, you are doing so at your own risk.
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hopeymchope · 6 months ago
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Writer names "The Hundred Line -Last Defense Academy-" as their most anticipated video game of 2025 in Sports Illustrated column; I am pleased and confused
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Hype "The Hundred Line." Do it. Dooo it.
My thoughts upon seeing and reading this column were roughly these, in order:
Sports Illustrated has video game content????
Not only that, Sports Illustrated runs gaming content that is blatantly written by a Danganronpa/Zero Escape fan???
AND they're a PS Vita fan!!
Damn, they even praised Zanki Zero's writing! This person knows what's UP.
Wait, she is out here shit-talking Master Detective Archives: Rain Code?? WTF, girl. Pssst, you're losing me.
....what's a GLHF?
Okay, so this Georgina Young is apparently a columnist for some kind of content farm called "GLHF" that just happens to supply material to both Sports Illustrated and USA Today. But regardless of the details of the source, it's still so damned wild to see the niche world of visual novel/Danganronpa/Zero Escape fandom get this kind of press somewhere like Sports Illustrated. I guess we're getting a little less niche every day, eh?
But I for one know that I can't expect these new franchises coming out of Kodaka and Uchikoshi to ever replace Danganronpa and/or Zero Escape in my heart. They are their OWN things, even as they carry over certain story themes and even gameplay concepts. I loved the two A.I.: The Somnium Files games, but I also don't think they reach the level of Zero Escape because, well... they're so different. They can't really be the same thing, and thanks to my inner edgelord, my heart will always belong foremostly to the darker story where there's more death and more on the line. The same is true of Rain Code vs. Danganronpa.
And I assume the same will remain true of Danganronpa vs The Hundred Line as well. Although we do appear to be getting closer to the kind of life-or-death emotional stakes crossed with quirky characters and wacky humor that I'm specifically jonesing for. So who knows?
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kenzan-kiwami · 13 days ago
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one of the reasons i enjoy keiji zero so much is that it dares to ask the question of "what if your traumagenic alter had autism"
#keiji zero#tokiya rekihiko#text#i don't think that's what the showrunners were going for though#one of the main themes of the series is to start from zero#as emphasised in the last case of the tv series by the password to the book of law + tokiya specifically being the one to figure it out#so i imagine what they were actually going for is a more childlike character who hasn't re-learned all of his adult inhibitions yet#(saso very aptly calls him ''ossan kodomo'' in one scene and. yea.)#but nouveau tokiya is so ridiculously sensory#always (physically) poking and prodding things in people's houses#and forgetting to use his inside voice when he finds a book he read as a child#his whole life after his accident is hiding (masking) the fact he lost his memory of the last twenty years#and his ability to memorise data is incredible#he glanced at a map for a few seconds and was able to memorise the route perfectly & he even had to correct saso when she went the wrong way#all of this is to say#i think he's intentionally an autism allegory in the same way as jotaro from JJBA but damn if they don't both hit me in those feels#(inb4 the point of the previous tag is to say that jotaro was not an intentionally autistic-coded character)#i'm a little bit sad the specials aren't subtitled because the first one especially is my favourite thing out of the whole series#brilliant showcase of the main characters all around And confirms tokiya's memory loss is basically DID#i can't say how good it is as representation because while i have several friends with DID i don't like to ask invasive questions about it#nonetheless though i find it interesting because he's only able to “swap” by falling into water while under extreme emotional distress#though i think after the first special they realised it sort of undermines the point the tv series left off on#(that it's ok to make a fresh start)#because while tokiya Did try to bring back heisei tokiya a few times during the second special he never succeeded#first special does reinforce the child thing though because vintage tokiya looks at a picture one of his colleagues took on his phone#and comments that he had no idea there was this three-year-old child inside him#(differentiating palaeo and neo tokiya with the names saso uses for him in whatever episode each event takes place in Lmao)
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echolesschamber · 2 years ago
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art from The Art of Metal Gear Solid V by Yoji Shinkawa
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mortellanarts · 5 months ago
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First, I'm not quite sure if you saw the answer I gave to your question on Rot in Paradise, so I'm just checking here 👍
Anyway, out of the three Zero Escape games, which one was your favourite and least favourite and why? I think for me it was 999 as the best, then VLR and then ZTD. I like all the games, but the first one was the one where I enjoyed things the most (especially the art for that one).
I sawww many moons ago, my bad qwq
I have had the game dowloaded along with Eloquent Countenance and played Married in Red!! Pretty simple but good, it made me nostalgic for finding those short and sweet rpg maker horror games between replaying the longer more popular ones, I'm looking forward to playing the two whenever my brain allows me especially since I'm trying to get back into game making and so I feel like I need to pay extra attention to everything
Second question! I certainly have a soft spot for 999 above the others as well (parentified brother of the year is not on the other ones) it was very important to me, that kind of media that shows up in your life right when you need it when things are tough to give you an epiphany on how to get through it you know? but even revisiting the serries as a whole I'd have to say the visual presentation does have a lot to do with it too yeah... VLR is harder to think about for me because there's so so much blue and grey that just morphs together but I'd still say I like it better than ZTD because some moments in it just really rub me off the wrong way despite me remembering them all much better? I think a lot of the last fic I made was me making peace with the way canon concluded and forcing open some space for the characters to breathe and feel like they have humanity and internal logic again to my way of reading each of them at least
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syn4k · 1 year ago
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every so often we stumble upon youtube videos or series from the late 2000s-mid 2010s and realize that they are a founding part of internet culture or our specific corner of it that everyone quotes without realizing it. this includes:
Code MENT
Ze End of ze World
Mianite
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omenousraven · 1 year ago
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Fanfiction Cast List
So- fan fiction. Something I try to do every once in a while and usually run out of motivation pretty early. In other words, no promises. However,
Recently I decided I was going to throw a bunch of my favorite characters from multiple types of media into the blender of my mind and trap them in what is essentially a mixture of saw and the hunger games because of my weird gore obsession. The question is, which characters?
Characters that are bold are the favorites in question. They are the ones who won't be removed unless their fandom is removed and the ones I'm most confident in writing. The ones in italics are people I'm thinking about using but am unsure if I can write them properly.
TWEWY (The World Ends With You); Shoka, Rindo
Zero Escape; Phi, Sigma
Raincode; Halara, Fubuki, Yuma, Desuhiko, Vivia
*Tangled the Series; Cassandra
*Danganronpa; Maki, Kyoko, Makoto, Kaito
*Madoka Magica; Homura
*MCYT (Characters not Creators); Pearl, Kara, Shubble, Gem
*Fate; Rin, Shiro
*Hololive (Characters not Creators); Ina, Mumei, Kiara, Kronii, Ame
*Fandom is for consideration of being scrapped.
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bibbumblebee · 2 years ago
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I want to make a video of me playing all the Sci;Adv games for the first time and breaking them down. Call it like “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Science Adventure.”
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v4mpszee · 3 months ago
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Cronus Chronicles thingy
Catering to that ONE cronus chronicles fan once again. We in this together twin dw
Anyways this is LITERALLY PHILONECRON AND ZACHARY/ZEE
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sepdet · 1 year ago
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every now and then i remember this relic of the early 2000s web is still buried in the bowels of the BBC's official website
Thank you, Tumblr, for allowing us to preserve this abomination in all its looping horror
The OFFICIAL Doctor Who Dance Video: Romana vs. Kylie (HD)
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ckret2 · 8 months ago
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The second dimension has burned, all its neighbors are burning, Bill's mutated Dimension Zero into some sort of non-euclidean horror land where he's setting up a ghoulish undead kingdom and pretending that he's fine, and every five minutes the Axolotl sees something new he's gonna have nightmares about for the next billion years.
Naturally, the gods of the multiverse have got to do something:
Make sure the non-euclidean horror land complies with local construction codes.
Here, have a fic. 
This is part 4 of a series about the Axolotl—and various local gods—trying to figure out how to deal with the aftermath of what will one day be called the Euclidean Massacre. Here are parts one, two, and three.
####
As the Time Giant inspected Dimension Zero, she took a dizzying array of measurements and performed several tests on the unstable cosmic foam that seemingly made up the dimension. To the Axolotl's untrained eye, the tests looked more like alchemy than engineering. She even momentarily popped out to a point in her timeline when she was in her office to pick up some more specialized equipment.
Dimension Zero operated like an omnidirectional treadmill, the Axolotl discovered; if you flew far enough to the left, you ended up looping around to the right, far enough up and you ended up down, far enough forward and you ended up in the back. The distances were vast, certainly, but finite. Which meant that finding the "edge" of Dimension Zero to escape it was near impossible—it had no edges. The Axolotl was amazed at his luck in having successfully found an exit the last time he was in here. Locating the border of this impossible dimension was like navigating a four-dimensional labyrinth.
But apparently the Time Giant was very good at navigating labyrinths, because again and again she effortlessly located Dimension Zero's border. It was like a thin layer of incorporeal cellophane you could move straight through without leaving Dimension Zero; but if you looked at it just right, from just the right time and place, it became real, and you saw through it into the neighboring dimensions. She spent a long time grimly examining the burning first and second dimensions "above" Dimension Zero—and a long time inspecting the places where the neighboring dimensions had already been incinerated completely, and Dimension Zero bloated out toward the third dimensions like an overfilled trash bag. 
And meanwhile, the "Magister Mentium," de facto ruler of this grotesque domain, decided that while he was waiting for news, the most magisterial thing he could do was returned to his party.
To the Axolotl's amazement, the triangle did actually seem to be dancing with his people. There was still some intelligence in some of the living and the dying-but-never-dead shapes.
Some of them knew a dance that involve interlacing their fingers, right hands to right hands, and whirling together around their joined grip, then switching to lace their left hands together and twirl the other way; and the triangle couldn't be puppeting them—not all of them, not all the time—because sometimes his dance partners were the ones who got the steps right while he fumbled the timing. The Axolotl watched as he missed grabbing a line's hand because he'd somehow gotten slightly skewed into the third dimension and his hand went over hers instead; she teasingly jabbed him in the side with her point, and in retaliation he knocked into her with one of his lower corners and snapped her in half; with a wave of his hand she was repaired and bewildered. In his shock, the Axolotl hadn't seen it the last time he'd been here—but the triangle's eternal dance party was both the horror of a root system digging deep into rotting flesh, and the hope of a flower blooming from an unmarked grave. How many of the dancers were voluntarily dancing forever? 
He didn't have an opportunity to find out. When the Time Giant had finished her inspection, she waved over the triangle again. (Not that she needed to; in spite of being back at the party, he'd also somehow remained at the Time Giant's elbow the whole time, watching what she did without blinking.) "All right, I've got the verdict on your dimension. Do you wanna start with the bad news, the worse news, or the ugly news?"
"Ease me into it," the triangle said. "So what's the matter with my dream realm?"
"The matter."
"That's what I'm asking."
"The matter's what's the matter with it."
"What?"
"Every reading I've taken indicates there's a dimension's worth of matter in here. The mass is here for it, all right. I'm picking it up no problem. I just can't find your matter." She gestured out at the infinite dance party, the swirling colors, the twinkling faraway lights, "Everything visible adds up to so little matter that I didn't even bring any tools sensitive enough to register it. It doesn't account for all the mass I'm measuring."
He surveyed the view warily. "So you're saying my place's mass is... what, invisible?"
"Invisible, stuck in pocket dimensions...  Y'all said any rubble left over from Dimension 2 Delta would've fallen in here, right? You got it hidden away somewhere?"
His eye lit up. "Oh! Are you looking for this?" He pulled a tall black hat out from seemingly nowhere and reached his arm all the way down into it to pull out a speck of dust: radiating blinding light in every direction, but so dark that staring into it made the Axolotl feel like his eyes were being sucked out of his skull into a black hole. "This is 2Δ's matter."
"Is that all that's left?"
"The whole shebang!"
"Then nah, that's not it. If that had all the matter of a dimension, and it was that small. it'd be the nuke of nukes. The seed of a Big Bang. All it'd take is a dimension's worth of energy to thaw that turkey, and pfft! You've got a baby dimension on your hands." She gestured dismissively at the speck, "No way a mortal could handle an object like that without its gravity crushing you—never mind have the energy to move it."
The triangle stared down at his little pearl of matter. "Huh." It was an oddly intense stare for just a fleck of dust.
"If you don't know where all the hidden matter is, then ten to one odds, you've got a dark matter problem," the Time Giant said. "Nasty stuff. It'll exponentially speed up the heat death of your dimension. You'll have to get a specialist in here to see if there's anything you can do about that dark matter. You want referrals?"
He was silent for a moment, still not looking up; then he said, "No, no—I don't need them." He stuffed the speck back into his hat, tossed aside the party hat he'd been wearing, and put on the black one. "I'm a DIY kind of triangle! I'll figure out what dark matter is."
The Time Giant snorted. "Suit yourself. Problem two: this dimension's a singularity. A really big, spread out singularity, which by the definition of a singularity is impossible—"
"We like impossible around here!"
"Uh huh, I can tell. But it means things that should be separate things are crushed together into one thing—including the landscape and the mindscape. Dreams and reality are occurring on the same level of existence. There's no clear distinction between facts and fiction."
"Okay," he said. "So, is that a problem, or...?"
"For starters," she jerked a thumb toward the distant-and-yet-somehow-ever-present dance party, "it means that the dead and the living are on the same plane. Can't separate life from an afterlife here. And it means anything could happen just by imagining it too hard. Some traumatized vet gets war flashbacks? The war's actually happening again. Have a nightmare about your wife dying? Your wife's dead. If everyone stops thinking about a building for a moment, it could stop existing. Contracts are useless—what you think you remembered them saying becomes what they actually said."
"So, is that a problem, orrr...?"
She paused. "Shoot, it's your universe. If you're fine with it, whatever."
"I call it the dream realm for a reason!"
"Issue three's the ugly one: this dimension's completely unstable," the Time Giant said.
"Yeah, I know," the triangle sighed. "The electromagnetism..."
"The electromagnetism ain't the half of it. I mean it is really unstable. I don't know how it's lasted as long as it has. I can see half a dozen ways the dimension could completely collapse on itself in the next ten minutes."
"What! Where?!"
She pointed. "For one thing, a whole pillar of spacetime right there is about to implode and form a wormhole."
He zoomed over to the pillar, multiplying into a dozen copies to examine it from every angle. (He looked the same small size as always, but the Axolotl realized that with the distance the pillar was at, he must be lightyears across to be visible from here—either that, or somehow he hadn't gotten any further away. The triangle shouldn't even visible when the light from his position shouldn't reach them for thousands of years. A realm that operated on dream logic.)
While he inspected the unstable structure, the Time Giant said, "Nothing about the structure of this place is self-sustaining. It should've collapsed back into a singularity as soon as 2Δ fell in. I got no idea how it just keeps propping itself back up..."
"Yeah, yeah, I'm working on it," the triangle snapped.
The Time Giant paused. "What?"
"I'm working on it! I'd be working on it right now if you hadn't dragged me away from the party!" The nearest iteration of the triangle groaned, dragging his eyelid down with his hands. "I've been spending ages trying to keep this stupid leaky balloon inflated, and now look at this!" He gestured in exasperation at the pillar preparing to wormhole itself. "I have to start again! Do you know how many times I've tried to fold the... the dumb... the plane?" He tried to pantomime the act of folding something with his hands; as he did, apparently without noticing what he was doing, he folded himself up, like a triangular origami paper. "Fold it in a way that'll get it to stay put? And it just won't! It keeps flopping over! It's driving me nuts!"
"The 'plane'?" 
He unfolded himself with a sharp snap. "You know what I'm talking about! The plane! The plane that everything's made out of! The..." Frustrated, the triangle grabbed a wad of existence itself and shook it in the Time Giant's and Axolotl's faces. "This stuff!"
"The fabric of reality?" the Time Giant asked, flummoxed. "You can detect the fabric of reality? You can interactwith it?"
"Is that what it is?" He flung it down in disgust. "Well, it won't stay put when I fold it!"
"Yeah, fabric tends not to do that."
"Right. Right." Grimly, the triangle said, "I need the starch of reality."
"Don't starch reality."
He flung up his hands in defeat. "Well, I've tried everything else!"
Softly, the Time Giant said, "Huh." As if she'd just figured out the answer to a question she hadn't even had a chance to ask.
On the other hand, the Axolotl just had more questions. He may not know very much about the fabric of reality, but... well, that was just the thing. He didn't know much about the fabric of reality. Sure, if he ran into a fraying timeline he could tie up the loose ends and snip off the damaged threads; he could summon up his pocket afterlife at any time, opening a liminal space into his tank from anywhere in the multiverse; but that was the most complex thing he could manage by himself. He certainly didn't know enough to do anything as complicated as keep an unstable dimension from imploding on itself.
But he did know that he didn't know nearly enough for it to be safe for him to even try... and he at least knew what the fabric of reality was. For someone even more ignorant than him to try it...
The Time Giant asked, "Didn'cha... say you're a mortal?"
"Yeah?" the triangle said defensively. He didn't even waste time looking at them; his full focus was back on the pillar, which was beginning to twist around itself. "Last I checked? And?"
She held up her hands. "S'fine. Nothing wrong with that."
Just before the pillar could fully transform into a wormhole, the triangle muttered irritably to himself and snapped his fingers. The pillar inverted like a flower bud turning inside-out. There was an infinitely vast creaking groan—but nevertheless, this immediately solved the pending wormhole issue. And also promptly caused four more things to go catastrophically wrong.
The triangle let out a strangled scream of frustration as half the firmament inverted colors and the stars glowed black. "No no no no no—!" He skidded across existence to the reversed sky, a thousand hands trying to twist the stars back on before the damage spread; another copy of him was knitting closed a rapidly unraveling corner of reality with his own arms as the thread; and the Axolotl wasn't sure what the other dozen shining yellow triangles he saw whizzing by were doing, but a ringing sound he hadn't previously noticed suddenly stopped.
Throughout Dimension Zero, there was a grinding, rumbling noise that filled all of existence. The Axolotl and Time Giant both flinched at a couple of great, splintering cracking noises, so deep that they were felt rather than heard. From every direction, the Axolotl could see soot and souls rain into the dimension. The Time Giant watched the grisly rain, jaw slack in amazement.
The Axolotl saw black hands catch the souls as they fell.
In a moment the triangle was back, looking a little worse for the wear: twitchy, dazed, eye dilated too wide, clearly even more distracted than he'd been a minute ago. He didn't look exhausted, per se—the Axolotl thought he should look exhausted—but it uncomfortably dawned on him that, if the triangle was powerful enough to knit the fabric of reality back together despite not even knowing what the fabric of reality was... maybe he was too powerful to get exhausted.
Where had a mortal gotten that power?
The triangle let out a heavy sigh. "Okay—"
And then a nearby star immediately collapsed into a black hole and started slurping down the raw fabric of reality rather than any of the regular matter hovering just outside its event horizon.
He froze a moment, eye squeezed shut in an expression of pure agony; and then he was zipping across the dimension again to fix one more crisis.
All this time, the Axolotl had thought the triangle was inebriated. He wasn't inebriated at all. It was pain. He had to be near delirious with pain, struggling to control everything without a moment's rest. Weaving back and forth and popping here and there across the dimension as he tweaked and fixed small crises before they became large ones, trying to convince himself that he was at a party as he danced frenziedly with his ever-dying people even as he simultaneously knit and taped and stapled existence back together with his own body. Every time they'd spoken to him, he'd been distracted. They were distracting him from keeping his entire reality from falling apart.
The Time Giant watched him zoom around with her thumbs hooked in her belt and a grin across her face. "Man. I wanna set you loose in an infinite hardware store and see what you do with it."
The triangle gave her an unamused, dead-eyed look. (And somewhere else, he was also picking up the black hole, eyeing it tiredly, and finally just punting it in a random direction. Existence rumbled again.)  "Hey, if you know a hardware store that's got whatever it'll take to keep this place from falling to pieces, and you think you can babysit the dream realm until I'm back...
Her smile faded. "Don't think that's gonna work."
He was immediately on his guard. "Oh?"
"That's what I was trying to explain: it's not just your dimension that's unstable; it's destabilizing all the dimensions around it, too."
He flung up his hands exasperatedly. Pale blue flames ignited around his hands. "Yeah, I know!" He hastily shook out the flames on his fingers as he said, "Tell the neighbors to keep their stupid pants on, I'm working on getting this place stable—" (The Axolotl stared at his hands long after the flames were gone.)
"No, you don't get it," she said. "Trying to stabilize it is what's destabilizing the other dimensions."
He paused. "What are you talking about."
"This 'dream realm' is supposed to be a singularity in an empty void at the bottom of everything. The dimensions above are designed to support the higher dimensions weighing down on them without collapsing. They're not structured to take pressure pushing up on them from below." The Time Giant gestured around at Dimension Zero, "And that's what we've got now! Your renovations have filled up the void. That's where that grinding when you 'move' is coming from: every time you try to prop up this dimension, it crashes against all the neighbors—and they push back and destabilize you again. Just based on what little I saw when I was checking the place out, the other second dimensions must be taking heavy damage. We're talking planes fracturing apart, physics destabilizing, wormholes, temperature fluctuations from absolute zero to near Big Bang-level heat—"
"And fires," the Axolotl said in realization, remembering the ashes he'd seen raining into Dimension Zero when the triangle had fixed the wormhole. "The dimensions that were around 2Δ are burning. Nobody could figure out why we couldn't get them under control. It was you."
All of Dimension Zero fell several degrees colder.
The music faltered. The distant dancers that could stop did, shaken out of their trances to look around for their magister. For a moment, the Axolotl could hear the dimension's hissing background radiation almost clearly enough to understand what it was saying—whispers, they were whispers, the Axolotl hadn't been imagining that they sounded like voices. They really were.
He thought he could hear screams in the whispers.
The triangle stared at them, eye wide and empty.
The Time Giant gave him a moment. "You good?"
"No, I— Yes, of course I'm good! I'm great!" He squeezed his eye shut and rubbed it harshly between his thumb and forefinger. He did not look great. "I'm not destroying any dimensions, that's insane! You're insane!" His voice was rising toward a shriek. "Nothing's on fire! I don't know what you're talking about! How would you know?! I heard you out there early, the rest of you are—what, what are you doing, arguing about whose district the ashes are in?! Trying to shift the blame to each other instead of doing anything? And meanwhile I've been here all this time! I'm the only one fixing anything! I'm the one who's been liberating my people from their stupid flat little dimensions before the apocalypse can reach them, so—what do you know about anything here!"
"'Liberating'?" the Time Giant said. "What in the multiverse are you talking about?" The Axolotl's stomach sank.
"You think I can't see out of this place?" He drew them closer and closer as Dimension Zero moved around them and grew larger and larger as he spoke, forcing them to look up at him. "You think I haven't noticed my people out there dying while you big shot so-called 'gods' stand around and watch?! I can see through all their eyes! I see everything! I feel it when they die! I've been the only one saving them!"
As clear as if it were real, the Axolotl saw his memory of Dimension 2 Epsilon burning. (The Time Giant sucked in a breath—the way the mindscape worked here, could she see his memory too? Could the triangle?) The shapes spontaneously combusting and plummeting into Dimension Zero. Reality seeming to twist around them, grasp them, crush them. He saw a frightened green triangle—except for the color, a triangle so like the Magister Mentium as he'd been on the day he met the "eclipse," young and small and terrified of the cosmic forces around him—crushed and burned in the folds of the fabric of reality. Only the shapes were taken—none of the creatures around them. The triangle's people. "You're not saving anyone! You're the one killing them!"
The triangle blazed red in rage.
Everything ignited. Searing, white-hot pain. The fire was on the Axolotl's skin, in his eyes, in his gills, inside his body. He felt the voices in the cosmic radiation screaming.
Everything unignited. The Axolotl was unharmed. (Was it a hallucination? A dream? Had it been too brief to leave damage?)
The Time Giant was holding the Axolotl in front of her chest like a big plushie shield.
The triangle was small and black and still. White light traced his edges like the halo around a black hole. He didn't say anything.
He was staring at the Axolotl's memory. And the Axolotl could see the triangle's memory: from above, the plane of Dimension 2 Epsilon melted and folded around a small frightened green triangle, crushing and burning it within the fabric of reality; from below the plane, a trembling black hand reached up, stretching into the fabric of 2Ε like it was a glove, trying so hard, so carefully to catch and cradle the other triangle before it fell, confused when the fingers opened and once again all that was left in the palm was ashes.
Both memories burned up and vanished.
The Axolotl shook himself free of the Time Giant's grip and cautiously swam closer to the triangle. "Magister...?"
The universe quietly moved, carrying the Axolotl and the Time Giant away and rotating around the triangle so they were placed behind him. Okay, fine. He'd wait.
When the triangle finally spoke again, his voice was hoarse and flat. "I can't just stop fixing the dream realm. It'll collapse on us." He turned slowly to face the Time Giant. His color was starting to come back. "You've got some kind of... divine home renovation crew that can repair everything?"
She shook her head. "Sorry. I still had some hope for this place when I thought it was banging against the neighbors when it was collapsing. But if fixing it is what's breaking everything... There's nothing we can do."
"Some god," the triangle muttered ruefully. "So... what are we supposed to do."
"Honestly? This void was never built to support a dimension. Best idea is to leave and set up your dancing hippie colony somewhere else," the Time Giant said. "The third dimension next to where 2Δ used to be is swarming with refugee services; if I were you, I'd talk to the guy with the planets to set you up somewhere until you can move into another dimension."
That snapped him out of his funk. "Are you kidding? I'd rather keep fixing this place for an eternity! We sacrificed everything to reach our paradise. We're not about to ditch it now!"
The Time Giant took in the wretched floating dance party huddled together in a lonely, landless, kaleidoscopic void, and silently mouthed, paradise. She shook her head and moved on. "Well, you can't keep this place even if you wanna. It's impossible to get this place up to cosmic construction code."
"Who cares about the code!" He zipped up to her face, hands outstretched to her beseechingly. "Can't you let it slide? I am willing to bribe you. Just tell me what it'll take!"
"Buddy." Her voice took on a steely edge. "The cosmic construction code defines how every dimension in the multiverse has to be built. It exists because any dimension that doesn't meet the code could destroy all of existence." (His eye widened.) "Your 'paradise' doesn't fit in the crawlspace beneath dimensions. One of two things will happen: eventually, you fail to stabilize it, it collapses in on itself, and everyone in here ceases to exist... or, you do stabilize it, and it destabilizes every dimension built above it, and the entire multiverse collapses in on itself—including your 'dream realm.' You like either of those options?"
The triangle's hands drooped helplessly. "I... But th... After all w... I can't..."
He fell silent. His light sank back toward black.
This triangle had made himself the leader of these people, he couldn't abandon them now. The Axolotl wasn't about to watch him lose himself in despair.
"Would you let your people die like that?" He circled behind the triangle, forcing him to turn to face the Axolotl—and face his people at the same time. "You said you liberated them." As misguided as he had been—and even if few of them, maybe none of them, were actually his people—it had to be an act of love, didn't it? He had to care about them, didn't he? "After everything you did to save them, do you want to lose them now?"
The triangle glanced at the shapes, and quickly looked away. "I..."
"Look at them," the Axolotl commanded. 
He looked at them.
Slowly, he floated over his eternal dance party. To the Axolotl's surprise, several of the clear-headed ones who had stopped dancing—the haggard, the ever-bleeding, the newer arrivals that were ever-burning—stretched their hands up toward him.
The triangle flinched, ever so slightly—just a twitch in his hands—and then he reached down to them in return. The line that the Axolotl had seen dancing with the triangle earlier brushed his fingertips; he stopped to squeeze her hand as he passed.
The Axolotl could see the guilt radiating out of the triangle.
He didn't know how he knew it was guilt. He didn't even know how he could see it—it had no color, no shape. Nevertheless, he saw it. The guilt spread out like ink in water, poisoning Dimension Zero, clinging to every surface. The Axolotl's skin was unusually sensitive to toxins; the guilt made him queasy.
One of the shapes asked the triangle something; the Axolotl couldn't hear the question, just the triangle's quiet answer: "Nah, don't worry about those losers. A few higher-dimensional beings got mad we liberated ourselves. They hate to see the second dimension winning. It's fine, I can kick their bases if they try to make any trouble."
(The Time Giant snorted. The Axolotl wasn't sure it was an empty threat.)
"Now why isn't everyone dancing! C'mon, chop chop, this is a celebration! I wanna see everyone shaking their sides! Talking to you, Graham!" The triangle raised a hand, threateningly preparing to snap his fingers; before he had to, all the shapes were dancing again, as enthusiastically/fearfully as ever.
He watched his people for a moment longer.
And then turned to the Time Giant and the Axolotl. "Okay," he said. "I'll talk to the guy with the planets."
####
(Thanks for reading!! If the art lured you in and this is the first chapter you read, this is part 4 of a 7-or-8 part fic that keeps getting more parts, about the Axolotl in the immediate aftermath of the Euclidean Massacre. I'll be posting one chapter a week, Fridays 5pm CST, so stick around if you wanna watch the Axolotl slowly discover just how much of a monster that silly triangle he likes really is.
It's ALSO chapter 64 of an ongoing post-canon post-TBOB very-reluctantly-human Bill fic. So if you wanna read more of me writing Bill, check it out. If you're not sold on the idea of a human Bill fic, I've also got a one-shot about normal triangle Bill escaping the Theraprism if you wanna read that.
If this is NOT your first time here and you already knew all of the above: the great thing about this plot is that almost every chapter has a new terrible reveal about what Bill's up to! Looking forward to hearing y'all's thoughts on this latest bunch of revelations. Depending on how I split things up, next week might be another more low-key chapter to set up further horrors.
Nobody asked but the line Bill was dancing with is named Lynn Segment, and the Graham he spoke to is a quadrilateral with two older siblings: Perry, Lilo, & Graham. What's the point of making geometric shape characters if you aren't giving them pun names.)
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xbuster · 11 months ago
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The Assorted TYPE-MOON Collection (as of 7/20/24)
Here is a link to Fate/stay night with the Ultimate Patch.
Here is a link to Fate/hollow ataraxia with the Ultimate Patch and the Fate PSP games.
Here is a link to various other TYPE-MOON games and manga/novels such as Kara no Kyoukai, Tsukihime, Melty Blood, and more Fate.
Some things to note:
ALL GAMES ARE PC GAMES EXCEPT THE FATE/EXTRA SERIES AND UNLIMITED CODES, WHICH ARE PLAYED ON THE PSP
– Kara no Kyoukai: the Garden of sinners, Tsukihime, and Fate are all part of the same metaseries penned by Kinoko Nasu (Witch on the Holy Night is as well, but it is not included in this collection since only the enhanced version is translated which can be bought on current generation consoles and PC)
– Fate/stay night Ultimate Patch has many settings to customize your experience of the game, please play around with them and set them to your liking, but some of my recommendations are **Display > Quality > High (x2.0) [higher resolutions not included due to much larger file sizes with diminishing returns] **Language > English ReTrans (2nd beta) **Patch > [ANY] Content > [Choose "Classic" for a first playthrough if you want a more faithful experience or "Mixed" for a faithful experience with some Vita additions, but might be best for a second playthrough] **Patch > Censorship > check "Show mature content" + "Show Ecchi & Hentai + Fan-made Demosaic" for the full eroge experience or keep "Show mature content" unchecked for the all-ages experience **Patch > Movie Playback Options > check Display subtitles in movies + Movie Quality > High **Patch > Route Lock > Automatic **Patch > Title menu style > Automatic
– Fate/hollow ataraxia Ultimate Patch has many settings to customize your experience of the game, please play around with them and set them to your liking, but some of my recommendations are **Display > Quality > High (x2.0) [higher resolutions not included due to much larger file sizes with diminishing returns] **Patch > Censor > check "Decensor H content" for the full eroge experience or keep "Censor H content" checked for the all-ages experience **Patch > Vita Additions > uncheck "Play Vita OP in-game" and "Vita Ending Credits" to see the original versions of each for a first playthrough **Patch>Movies>check Display subtitles in movies
– Fate PSP includes Fate/Extra, Fate/Extra Perfect Patch+ (the same game as Fate/Extra but patched to include subtitles for all Japanese voice lines, fixes some of the original translation to better match Fate canon, and bug fixes), Fate/Extra CCC (a sequel to Fate/Extra that takes place during that game), and Fate/Unlimited Codes (a fighting game based around Fate/stay night with a few characters from Hollow Ataraxia and Zero)
– Tsukihime series goes Tsukihime > Tsukihime PLUS-DISC (contains Alliance of Illusionary Eyes) > Kagetsu Tohya
– Melty Blood is a series of fighting games featuring the cast of Tsukihime (ReACT is an expansion for the original Melty Blood)
Many more games are available for purchase on PC and current generation consoles such as Witch on the Holy Night, Tsukihime -A piece of blue glass moon-, Melty Blood: Type Lumina, the Fate/Extella series, Fate/Samurai Remnant, and upcoming games such as Fate/stay night REMASTERED, and Fate/Extra Record
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