As do I. Its tastelessness only grows as time passes. And I cannot quite say I had many fond memories of these things in the first place.
[ ships are bad in tales of xillia. why? don't worry about it. ]
A friend, though... Yes. Perhaps he was a friend, as much as a spirit could call an emperor of the human world such.
[ up, up, up... she expects it to fall back out of the crane's claws halfway up like it has been, but Junpei really must be much better than her at this, because the crane's grasp holds steady all the way towards the exit chute. ]
Oh, you really are good at this! Thanks for being such a great help-- oh...?
[ Muzet's smile seems almost a little wistful as she bends to pick- but as soon as her fingers brush against it, the trinket dissolves into nothing, and they're thrown into a memory.
It's just the boy, the girl, and the man at first, in a cold and frozen land. There's a flicker of recognition when a certain voice calls out "Jude!", but she leaves them to their reunion first, one that as it turns out, is more heartfelt than the one the two sisters (?) end up having.
... There's actually an overall lack of strong feeling attached to the memory overall, just a dreamy, serene sort of vague satisfaction at the way things seem to be going? ]
no subject
[ ships are bad in tales of xillia. why? don't worry about it. ]
A friend, though... Yes. Perhaps he was a friend, as much as a spirit could call an emperor of the human world such.
[ up, up, up... she expects it to fall back out of the crane's claws halfway up like it has been, but Junpei really must be much better than her at this, because the crane's grasp holds steady all the way towards the exit chute. ]
Oh, you really are good at this! Thanks for being such a great help-- oh...?
[ Muzet's smile seems almost a little wistful as she bends to pick- but as soon as her fingers brush against it, the trinket dissolves into nothing, and they're thrown into a memory.
It's just the boy, the girl, and the man at first, in a cold and frozen land. There's a flicker of recognition when a certain voice calls out "Jude!", but she leaves them to their reunion first, one that as it turns out, is more heartfelt than the one the two sisters (?) end up having.
... There's actually an overall lack of strong feeling attached to the memory overall, just a dreamy, serene sort of vague satisfaction at the way things seem to be going? ]