Let's go lesbians, let's goooo!!!!
How I feel after making a comic about mother feelings while having zero of them:
Fandom: Scopper Gaban is gonna be so badass when he's finally introduced.
Oda:
The day Oda reveals Brook's life before he became a pirate will be the day I rest
For some reason, I find this scene really cute. Itâs right after Usopp absolutely decks Klahadore (Captain Kuro) for running his mouth about Yasopp and even questioning if heâs really Usoppâs dad. Usopp storms off, feeling like crap, sitting at the cliff overlooking the shore, tossing rocks into the waterâwhen suddenly, Luffy pops up right in his space and goes, âHere you are!â because heâd been looking for him. Not just to find him, but because he knew Usopp needed validation. He knew Usopp was Yasoppâs son, and more importantly, he knew Usopp was his. Luffy could tell Usopp felt like sh*t, and in the most Luffy way possible, he sought him outânot with a big speech, not with some grand gesture, but just by showing up. Because sometimes, thatâs all you need.
People love to downplay Usopp and act like heâs not one of Luffyâs closest friends, but moments like this prove otherwise. His arc really highlights just how selfless Luffy is when it comes to the people he truly cares about. In this scene, Usopp was already his, and Luffy had already claimed himâUsopp just hadnât caught on yet. Luffy had basically said, "You're my friend. I like you. And I'm gonna help you." And Usopp, completely oblivious, just screams at Luffy for scaring him.
Honestly, isnât that the sweetest thing? Thatâs why, when they argue and clash, it just hits different. Because they love each otherâsometimes a little too much, to the point where they donât always know how to give each other what they need. But thatâs what makes them them.
People say Zoro and Luffy are in sync, that theyâre soulmates in battle, but Usopp is the one who can hurt Luffy the mostâyet also lift him up in ways no one else can. Yeah, Luffyâs the captain, and heâs supposed to be mature and responsible, but Usopp is the one who reminds him that heâs still just a 19-year-old. That sometimes, things arenât that deep. But other times, they are, and Luffy needs someone to tell him that.
Usopp is the one who looks at the insanity of the Grand Line and says, âThis sh*t isnât normal.â And I think thatâs what truly makes him Luffyâs in a way no one else is. Even if he canât support him like his wings in battle, Usopp is the one who, in a moment like Marineford, could have told him, âWhat happened to you wasnât normal. And you donât have to pretend it is.
Thatâs why Usopp is his.
I don't think Akutagawa has lost his memories, neither do I think he's faking it, or doing it as a way to get Atsushi to react and get back on his feet.
In chapter 117, when Bram saves Aya from the airport wreckage, he says that he transferred his consciousness into Akutagawa's body when Fyodor's ability took over his own body, and that his ability would also die with him, his consciousness disappearing as a consequence. . The question is: we don't know what happens to a vampire who turns back into a human, nor whether all vampires were transformed back, or just Akutagawa, because Bram took his body. I don't believe that all vampires have become human, as Fyodor mentions that as long as he has Bram's body, the echoes of his ability would still exist, and he can still control everyone who has been turned into a vampire around the world, so it is likely that only Akutagawa was transformed into a human again (vampirism having disappeared along with Bram's consciousness), even if remnants of his transformation are still present in his body, like a vampire's durability. It is these vampiric remnants and characteristics that make me think that Akutagawa's sudden amnesia was caused by traces of Bram's soul/consciousness in his body.
When Bram dies, we see Akutagawa accepting his mission to protect Aya. Everything in the manga suggested that this was Akutagawa's own decision, and to a certain extent, it is, but it is quite likely that Bram's traits and characteristics remained in Akutagawa's body even after his death. This whole role of a "noble knight" was a striking characteristic of Bram, who always saw the current world as if it were still his time, and used terms from that same time to refer to everyone. Part of Bram's consciousness may have remained in Akutagawa's body along with the vampire characteristics, causing his consciousness to mix with Bram's consciousness, or be overwhelmed by it, which perhaps could have been the cause of his lack of consciousness, and memory. Something I found curious is that Akutagawa not only has protecting Aya (or the princess) as his mission, but also the commoners, something that was not included in Bram's order/request.
So where did the part about protecting the commoners come from? Is it something caused by Bram's influence? A part of Akutagawa's new (and probably temporary) knight persona? Or a wish of his own? His own desire to protect people?
Well, I don't know, but if that's the case, I can see a lot of ways this memory loss could really add something to Akutagawa's character arc. We know that he is someone who is truly true to his promises, and when Bram's consciousness and influence begin to dissipate from his mind, he will probably still remind that he promised to protect Aya, and will commit to fulfilling his promise. Being placed in the role of protecting someone, for Akutagawa, would be something really good, it would help him understand that he doesn't need to kill for his life to have meaning, that there is also value in protecting other people, that this is not necessarily linked to a failure (the last time he protected someone, they all got killed), and that there is something good about protecting and helping people. Finding a new reason to live would also help him get rid of the idea that the value of his life is linked to Dazai's approval of him. It's clear how he was using rashomon in a much more effective way in the last chapter compared to his other fights, so much that even Atsushi seems surprised. I believe this comes from the fact that Akutagawa learned (due to his life both on the slums and in the mafia) to use rashomon as a weapon, not as an extension of his own body, as a part of himself, in addition to that he does not need to use rashomon to fortify his body, which allows him to use rashomon more freely.
Other things that I think could have caused Akutagawa's amnesia are his transformation back into a human (dying, being turned into a vampire, and then back into a human again could definitely do some damage to anyone's brain), and Bram's promise to Aya to protect her, as we know that in Bsd promises can be kept even after someone has turned into a vampire (as we see with Akutagawa and his promise not to kill anyone). Bram's promise to Aya surpassed Dostoevsky's ability, causing Fyodor to create a great will to protect Aya, so it is not so impossible that it also surpassed Bram's death.
the last line being "feel strongly / that's what you do when you want to experience the past" is so important to me genuinelyyyyyyy like. god. god. the dead authors manga for people who are bad at living. the lack of a solid time setting when it comes to bsd in a very deliberate way. the things that asagiri is always always saying about death as a transient state through bsd. fiction and emotion and death and the aftershocks that these dead authors and their literature leave across history.
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