I'm just curious. From what I have seen the longest seems to be the PE formality post on Griffith/Femto but possibly, there is a PE proposal which is longer and which I have not seen.
@Accounty the Sequel He planned to repropose him but he abandoned the idea.
I'm just curious. From what I have seen the longest seems to be the PE formality post on Griffith/Femto but possibly, there is a PE proposal which is longer and which I have not seen.
Oh yeah, sorry I forgot.
You can do it yourself.
I haven't fully read Berserk so I'm not at the Ganishka Arc and I haven't seen Fionna and Cake either.
However since I have seen the anime Death Note and Demon Slayer, I can answer you the difference between Enmu's death and Light's death for you.
You see, Light's death in the anime is supposed to symbolize the fact that if he hadn't taken the Death Note, he would have become a better person (as we can see with somes flashback when he was normal students or a hallucination of a young him who pass next to its present version). We are shown in this scene that Light is basically also a victim of the Death Note and that this notebook therefore destroyed his life. There is also a kind of pathos in this scene with the sunset, Light who ends up calmly accepting his death or the sad music in background.
Enmu, unlike Light, has none of this. His death seriously lacks pathos. It certainly ends with him lamenting the fact that he can't commit any more deaths and although he also laments the fact that the low demons of his kind are always killed by the demons slayers while the Uppermoons have remained in their ranks for centuries, I think this is used to tease Uppermoons's arrival and show how dangerous they will be in the future. Ultimately although his death is shown in some horrifying ways it is shown to be deserved with his comment comparing his death to a nightmare being karmic considering he enjoyed torturing humans with nightmares.
77 Votes in Poll
Yeah same.
@BLAHBLAHBLAH99999999999 Sorry I misspelled.
56 Votes in Poll
I don't remember very well but I think it's because at one moment, it use a hallucinations of a woman to seduce Jack Torrance.
Frollo was supposed to be a tragic figure not a anti-villain.
There is a category for EPs who were saved by heroes. However, I'm interested in the opposite example where an PE saved a hero.
That could be just by pragmatism or took place during a time when the villain was more sympathetic or was even a former hero like with Griffith who saved Casca from being raped and who saved Guts' life several times.
This would also be preferable if in the example, the hero saved is a Pure Good.
Mysterio from the MCU.
@Erza221 Muzan has one comedic moment when Mitsuri is scared from him.
There is the Joker from the Nolan Verse who remains happy even if his plan goes wrong and he is arrested by Batman.
73 Votes in Poll
There is a difference between being delusional and being amoral.
In the cases of delusional Pure Evil villains, their intentions are not ultimately noble. For example, Light deep down doesn't really want to reduce crime to build a better world, he just wants to become the god of a world that he controls through fear. We can also cite Belos, who deep down does not want to exterminate witches to save humanity but just to be seen as a hero.
Also, there is the fact that delusional Pure Evil villains can have moments where they realize that their actions are evil. In the case of Claude Frollo, there are certain moments where he seems to recognize that he is not the virtuous man he thinks he is, such as when he asks God to have mercy on him during his song "Hellfire".
As for amoral villains, they believe 100% what they do is right, with no ulterior motives behind their actions such as sadism or greed. For example, Douma thinks 100% that he "saves" the souls of the women he eats without any ounce of selfish intention on his part because he is too cracked in the head to realize the seriousness of it. his actions where the delusional Pure Evil villains are just too narcissistic to realize that they are bad people while lying to themselves.
Well, there is Stu Macher who is afraid of Billy Loomis and is rather submissive towards him.
Holden is ALL but underrated.
I don't know. Ask @ACisNet999 he was the ont who did the proposal.