Talk:The Blame/@comment-27191020-20180303223051

You know, it's true, lots of books are brutal. Warriors by Erin Hunter is the greatest example, as in one of the books a character practically gets ripped in half and dies nine times over, and in another a character is manipulated into learning battle techniques from dead guys to easily kill a foe, and later she realizes what a mistake she's made and wants to stop learning, but her sister and their two cousins convince her to endanger her life just so they're prepared to battle these dead guys. Heck, at one point, an innocent young male is killed, and then later he has to be killed again (I've read the books and that still doesn't make sense to me) by the previously mentioned female.

But you know what? I love these books, and the female with the very dark story is one of my favorite characters. Some of my favorite books and games are very brutal, and even my own comics and shows I've been writing are filled to the brim with sensitive material and topics, but that's what makes them fun. I really don't like how this episode ends, and Felicity was somehow m'ore' unbearable than she was in The Egg, but I really liked the message the kids were conveying. Even in the form of my least favorite kind of music, which I think actually made their argument more convincing, I loved their argument towards Felicity's banning of video games.