This is a perfect example of how not to play the game.cantataria wrote:[I restarted the game 56745624 times because I didn't like where my choices got me!]

And you don't need to attend classes to be smart.

This is a perfect example of how not to play the game.cantataria wrote:[I restarted the game 56745624 times because I didn't like where my choices got me!]
ya it was a dumb move lmao. i enjoyed all the characters by the end pretty much equally though, like even my favourite is just by a hair.Potato wrote:This is a perfect example of how not to play the game.cantataria wrote:[I restarted the game 56745624 times because I didn't like where my choices got me!]
And you don't need to attend classes to be smart.Case in point, Hanako. Thankfully Hisao never suggests she's dumb as a hammer...
Except that assumption is exactly right in Hanako's case.Rudz wrote:minus the assuming she want's the D cause she stripped a little to show you her scars...
Honestly, I didn't care for Hanako initially. I simply found her too timid and flighty. That said, I really enjoyed her route once I got into it. She's got some very cute and endearing traits, and a very positive ending. I have to say thought, that her do or die choice go to town or call it a day severely pissed me off. Why?Rudz wrote:My favorite has to be Hanako, and no - not because she was my first play-through.
It is actually down to a number of reasons. In a way, the way Hisao is in this story is almost exactly how I was for years (minus the assuming she want's the D cause she stripped a little to show you her scars...) with some girlfriends I had. This isn't the Hanako's Broken Heart thread - so I won't go into details. I mean I was the same, I wanted to protect them, I wanted to do everything in my power to erase the troubles of their past and be their 'white knight'. It is never a good thing, that I had to learn the hard way. But to see Hisao make the same mistakes as me, I felt a sense of familiarity with myself that I don't get with other play-throughs, really. Apart from maybe a little in Emi's.
That and I naturally feel inclined to reach out to those who feel socially excluded, because I have been there and still am there sometimes.
I'm a little fuzzy on the scene in question, but it seemed to me that going into town together to get some air, rather than just both of them going back to their dorm rooms and brooding is the best thing for both of them.someguy1294 wrote:
Honestly, I didn't care for Hanako initially. I simply found her too timid and flighty. That said, I really enjoyed her route once I got into it. She's got some very cute and endearing traits, and a very positive ending. I have to say thought, that her do or die choice go to town or call it a day severely pissed me off. Why?
The assumption the writers appear to be making is that saying 'call it a day' is an act on the reader's part to protect Hanako: it's the idea that she's too shy and fragile to go around in public that's supposed to be so damning. The thing is, making that choice had nothing to do with white-knighting for me. I was simply a little emotionally rung-out from the previous scenes; that exhaustion influenced my decision more than anything else. Not to mention that making the wrong choice there actually robs you of the ability to make a choice later... severely annoying. I'm practically screaming at Hisao to give Hanako space, but I have no power to make a significant choice.
What's so annoying about it? You chose to send her off back to her room where she can brood and generally be all-around depressing alone inside her head, same as she probably does often enough already. How could you not expect something bad?someguy1294 wrote:The assumption the writers appear to be making is that saying 'call it a day' is an act on the reader's part to protect Hanako: it's the idea that she's too shy and fragile to go around in public that's supposed to be so damning. The thing is, making that choice had nothing to do with white-knighting for me. I was simply a little emotionally rung-out from the previous scenes; that exhaustion influenced my decision more than anything else. Not to mention that making the wrong choice there actually robs you of the ability to make a choice later... severely annoying. I'm practically screaming at Hisao to give Hanako space, but I have no power to make a significant choice.
...Except that leaving Hanako in her room to be all alone is later the key to the good ending.Potato wrote:What's so annoying about it? You chose to send her off back to her room where she can brood and generally be all-around depressing alone inside her head, same as she probably does often enough already. How could you not expect something bad?someguy1294 wrote:The assumption the writers appear to be making is that saying 'call it a day' is an act on the reader's part to protect Hanako: it's the idea that she's too shy and fragile to go around in public that's supposed to be so damning. The thing is, making that choice had nothing to do with white-knighting for me. I was simply a little emotionally rung-out from the previous scenes; that exhaustion influenced my decision more than anything else. Not to mention that making the wrong choice there actually robs you of the ability to make a choice later... severely annoying. I'm practically screaming at Hisao to give Hanako space, but I have no power to make a significant choice.
Plus, Hanako cowers from everything, not just Shizune. And few people let Shizune bother them. Dunno where you got this idea that Rin's special for not giving a damn.
Gonna put a cap on the entire thought process behind that question right off the bat: This is a discussion, not a debate. There's no right or wrong here (putting forth a different viewpoint is not "You were wrong"), there's just typing.someguy1294 wrote:So... where exactly were you going to show me I was wrong?
Also, you use too many lol faces. It's starting to make you look mocking and disrespectful.
"French are just Spanish Germans, therefore Mexicans."Sea wrote:Comrade, as Khan Bek has convinced me to give Democracy a try.
I feel like Lilly would provide that with some persuasion in booze form.Comrade wrote:Anal
Let me count the ways…someguy1294 wrote:Why do I love Rin so much?
I think she does, though. Shizune pesters Rin to get the mural finished on time, and she runs herself ragged doing just that. It's kind of a foreshadowing of how she acts later on regarding the gallery showing, too — she lets pressure to produce get to her.She's also one of the few character who doesn't let Shizune's bitching affect her.
This is only if you start from the myth that her route is about white-knighting. It's really a lot simpler than that: Lilly just left for Scotland. You need to be there for Hanako instead of abandoning her right when she needs you the most.her do or die choice go to town or call it a day severely pissed me off. Why?
The assumption the writers appear to be making is that saying 'call it a day' is an act on the reader's part to protect Hanako: it's the idea that she's too shy and fragile to go around in public that's supposed to be so damning.
That's our Comrade! I think we'll keep him. We'll be right back, folks.Comrade wrote:Anal
You may have the kernel of a good theory there, Spudster. I've known women like that — drunkasexuals.Potato wrote:I feel like Lilly would provide that with some persuasion in booze form.Comrade wrote:Anal