Comment on Brockton's Celestial Forge

  1. Training scenes can be a fun demonstration of ability, but without real stakes there’s not much tension. I felt covering the events in retrospect was a better way to handle it, as seeing Aisha’s reaction to the situation which is fun in its own way.

    The idea was that, on Earth Bet, Web of Magic was one of the best shows to come out of Western Animation. Think the best of Avatar, Young Justice, Clone Wars, the DCAU, and other shows of that caliber. It was a show produced by a significant number of very talented Japanese immigrants who were going all out to effectively make their name in America. That said, it was still an American cartoon show, meaning you had network meddling, restrictions form standards and practices, and a limited animation budget. Excalibur didn’t look quite as detailed as it does in the Fate series so Joe sees the lettering as a blobby approximation aping the fairy letters that are extremely significant to him.

    Rachel has a few quiet and thoughtful moments in Worm, she’s just not usually able to indulge in that kind of thing thanks to her innate limitations, defensiveness, and the situation the city was going through. Little things like the fact that an significant portion of social media is centered around sharing videos of dogs is exactly the kind of thing she would gravitate towards, particularly when any barriers keeping her out were removed.

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    1. Thanks for replying, and yeah, showing the training in retrospect and via Aisha's reaction was the right move.

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