Post by Star Fall on Dec 10, 2017 12:27:23 GMT
Patrick Frye!pR.BaFF/uk 29 Jan 2016 7:56:27 PM No.41240039>>41240641
File: 1454115387138.jpg (498.39 KB, 750x900, Portgas.D..Ace.full.1928772.jp…)
>>41240025
Well, that is true, and it's definitely not something to be missed, but you're missing the slightly bigger picture, here. Maybe I'm being too complicated with it.
>Scratching the hair under his hat, he figured it'd probably just be easier to explain it at this point, rather than make her more frustrated than she already was. Honestly, he was surprised she didn't know the difference between ice and snow better than he did, given where she lived.
I've not been to very many cold places, and I definitely haven't been to the Frost Fade yet, but I've had a pretty hellish experience in the couple of snowy places I did go to, and I'm guessing the same goes for where you're from too.
Ice can be scary, sure. It's slippery, sharp and hard and it's damn cold too, but ice isn't the real danger of a cold environment. Sure, they tell you to watch out for slip hazards and to be careful of icicles, but what's the number one thing they always warn you about when cold weather storms through?
>He raised a single finger to emphasise that 'number one' point, before breaking out into a wide grin. This is where she'd probably end up kicking herself.
Blizzards. Snowstorms. It's not the ice that's scary, it's not the cold, it's the snow flying everywhere and causing you problems. It's so thick that you can't see what's in front of you, you're caught out in the open, blind and unaware, getting colder every second while you don't know where to go. The snow piles on thicker and thicker, slowing you down while you trudge through inches, then feet of the stuff. Eventually you just wander until you drop dead, without ever knowing where you were headed.
Victoria is ice - she's to the point, she's got a hard personality and she likes to get the job done quick and simple. You? You're patient, you bide your time, before swarming and capturing what you're after when they've got no-where else to go.
All those heaps of snow you were trying to throw around? They're never going to be as effective as throwing chunks of ice, so it got you down, left you feeling inferior, when really you were the one that got the scariest magic out of the two of you.
Because I sure as hell never want to get caught in a blizzard again.
File: 1454115387138.jpg (498.39 KB, 750x900, Portgas.D..Ace.full.1928772.jp…)
>>41240025
Well, that is true, and it's definitely not something to be missed, but you're missing the slightly bigger picture, here. Maybe I'm being too complicated with it.
>Scratching the hair under his hat, he figured it'd probably just be easier to explain it at this point, rather than make her more frustrated than she already was. Honestly, he was surprised she didn't know the difference between ice and snow better than he did, given where she lived.
I've not been to very many cold places, and I definitely haven't been to the Frost Fade yet, but I've had a pretty hellish experience in the couple of snowy places I did go to, and I'm guessing the same goes for where you're from too.
Ice can be scary, sure. It's slippery, sharp and hard and it's damn cold too, but ice isn't the real danger of a cold environment. Sure, they tell you to watch out for slip hazards and to be careful of icicles, but what's the number one thing they always warn you about when cold weather storms through?
>He raised a single finger to emphasise that 'number one' point, before breaking out into a wide grin. This is where she'd probably end up kicking herself.
Blizzards. Snowstorms. It's not the ice that's scary, it's not the cold, it's the snow flying everywhere and causing you problems. It's so thick that you can't see what's in front of you, you're caught out in the open, blind and unaware, getting colder every second while you don't know where to go. The snow piles on thicker and thicker, slowing you down while you trudge through inches, then feet of the stuff. Eventually you just wander until you drop dead, without ever knowing where you were headed.
Victoria is ice - she's to the point, she's got a hard personality and she likes to get the job done quick and simple. You? You're patient, you bide your time, before swarming and capturing what you're after when they've got no-where else to go.
All those heaps of snow you were trying to throw around? They're never going to be as effective as throwing chunks of ice, so it got you down, left you feeling inferior, when really you were the one that got the scariest magic out of the two of you.
Because I sure as hell never want to get caught in a blizzard again.