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naraku360

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Everything posted by naraku360

  1. imchapp.in[/member]-senpai noticed me.... owo
  2. It doesn't have to be white to be albino. The eyes don't have red irises; the eyes are red because the lack of pigmentation of the iris makes the blood inside the iris visible. Either the albinism only effected development of the eyes or the lacking pigment if its fur is low-pigment rather than no-pigment. It's just like if a black person is albino. There's sometimes still pigmentation in the skin, but it's much lighter than it normally would be.
  3. Red eyes are a symptom of albinism. I've actually met someone who had light-red eyes because she was albino. It's rarer in humans, but it does exist.
  4. naraku360

    Cringeposting

    That's.... not what "cringe" generally refers to.
  5. No, I knew but mixed up the colors since I didn't pay enough attention to recessive vs doninant. The reverse of what I said is more accurate. You can usually tell what color the eyes will be from the parents or grandparents, especially with recessive colors.
  6. I wasn't really thinking of recessive genes.... and picked the wrong color for an example. But both would have to have the blue-eye genes, which is usually predictable as well.
  7. Uh..... the eye color has to be inherited genetically. You can't have a blue-eyed baby from 2 brown-eyed parents. The only exceptions I can think of are very rare genetic abnormalities. Such as albinism where the iris doesn't develop a pigment [red/pink eyes] or, what I got from my mom, aniridia which is no iris [black eyes]. This applies to hair color as well. Aside from extremely unusual genetic abnormalities, the hair color will be the same as the mom or dad.
  8. naraku360

    Cringeposting

  9. naraku360

    Cringeposting

    Give hin some credit. He doesn't need a manbun to make us cringe.
  10. naraku360

    Cringeposting

    Take your pick: http://unevenedge.com/profile/?area=showposts;u=3
  11. "It was the ultinate cliffhanger" was the actual first line of the finale, in direct reference to it. It's beautifully stupid.
  12. I think you're missing the joke.
  13. It did, however, have the ultimate cliffhanger.
  14. That's true. I'm only suggesting what makes the stranger parts more digestible. You could go without the tie-ins and be fine, but something like Laura's diary took me [a very slow reader] a few hours to read and is really complementary to FWWM. I wish I'd read it before seeing the movie Something like Secret Lives has so much fluff I don't really know that I'd suggest it to anyone not deeply invested in the lore. I'm more leaning toward "Look up chapter summaries via Wiki or something" rather than "read this ridiculously dense history book". Just because some of it is real useful for S3, but the majority of that book was... I'm not a huge fan of it, felt needlessly overbearing. It has some of the most significant hints, but overall my least favorite tie-in.
  15. "Martin, who has two more in the series to publish, said he would put it in if it lent itself to the plot. He said the books are narrated through his "viewpoint" characters, so he was more limited than the TV shows. "Frankly, it is the way I prefer to write fiction because that is the way all of us experience life. You're seeing me from your viewpoint, you're not seeing what someone over here is seeing. Because none of the viewpoint characters are gay, there are no explicit gay sex scenes in the early books. "A television show doesn't have those limitations," he said. "Will that change? It might. I've had letters from fans who want me to present particularly an explicit male sex scene – most of the letters come from women." " https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/aug/11/george-rr-martin-game-of-thrones-gay-sex
  16. Flipping stones is Othello. Go is about taking the largest amount of territory. It's not really about killing stones stones, but if you surround enemy stones you take them off the board.
  17. Except Hikaru no Go was about the characters more than the game. You didn't need to know how to play the game to follow what was happening for the most part. Yugioh is just a clusterfuck of nonsensical battles where there pretty much are no rules [as far as the show is concerned, that is] despite the games being the focal point of the series. It's kinda awful actually.
  18. naraku360

    ELEPHANT!

  19. I felt like FWWM was much more relevant than the original TV show proper. The main significance of the original show was Dale, the FBI+Garland Briggs and the sheriff department, and a few characters that popped up occasionally but most of whom were primarily cameos. I could follow most of the show pretty well, but there was so much to be missed without FWWM or some of the written stuff. Like entire episodes dedicated to stuff introduced there, like It's probably not necessary to read something as needlessly dense as Secret Lives in full, but with how much it talks about elements of the Lodge lore it's at very least worth looking into Wiki summaries of it. Something like the Diary of Laura Palmer I only recommend because it's a good book and makes FWWM markedly better or the Dale autobiography just because it's a fun read.
  20. Why did fuggs give her fanfic character a name that sounds like a pharmaceutical?
  21. You can use my "dildo".
  22. No, why would literally anyone remember him?
  23. I wasn't telling you to. I was correcting you.
  24. Eh. Season 1 > season 2 > Secret Diary of Laura Palmer > Fire Walk with Me > Secret Lives of Twin Peaks [or a Cliffnotes of it -_'] > season 3. Yes, the movie and several tie-in books are practically mandatory. That's basically the most comprehensible way to get through it, given season 3 is an accumulation of the entire lore, not just limited to the previous show. Laura Palmer's Diary adds a lot of context to FWWM, season 3 is virtually incomprehensible without FWWM and Secret Lives. The Autobiography of F.B.I. Special Agent Dale Cooper can go just about anywhere after season 1. It's a fun read, but less useful than the other tie-ins and parts are retconned by production issues of FWWM. Missing Pieces also helps a little to acclimate to FWWM and a few things make more sense with it, but the only scenes that add much are the more coherent Philip Jeffries scene and the Laura scenes. Otherwise, most of it is whatever.
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