drew this, forgot to post, and then slept for 18 hours straight (i still feel like i haven't slept at all ughhh)
[Reference]
Inspired by Existential Crisis Mode written by @luciaintheskyainthi
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"Yup that's my husband for sure"
The more they change...
The more they stay the same
In the spirit of DC transitioning into having Nightwing the Justice League, I need opinions on what would happen if Peter grew up and also became a member of the JL
Constantly compared to his dad? Or gain his on rep? Do they even know? Omg what if I made a series of this
"Spider-man in the Justice League"
I would NOT be offended if someone did this đź‘€
sometimes you just laugh over nothing together
25.10.2022
my take on human caldarus while i sit in the waiting room.
idk how to explain but he feels very rune factory 4 leon to me <3
I think they'd just keep ordering batty meals until they all get one of the red robin toys
my piece for @timdrakeflipzine
Classic Photographs with Pokemon made by AdamDoesArt
the trend of shrinking hans capon into a submissive, feminized “twink” is so regressive and creatively lazy.Â
the idea that hans’ theatrics or needing rescue in-game automatically code him as a “bottom” is a stereotype literally rooted in misogyny. since when do drama, sass, or vulnerability—traits routinely gendered as “feminine”—equate to sexual submission?Â
this is a really reductive take. it weaponizes patriarchal baggage to pigeonhole queer dynamics: softness = weakness, flair = passivity. it’s the same toxic logic that paints flamboyant men as punchlines or prey in mainstream media.Â
capon’s theatrics aren’t a surrender of power. they’re tools of a cunning nobleman. queer history shows us that femmes and flamboyant individuals have always been leaders, provocateurs, and survivors—not passive accessories. reducing capon to a “bottom” because he’s extra not only severely misreads his character, but regurgitates the old and tired lens that equates femininity with inferiority.Â
fans can argue it’s “fiction” and “preference” and “harmless fun”, but when these stereotypes dominate, they reduce gay men to hollow fantasies for straight and heteronormative audiences instead of fully realized people. personal preferences in fiction aren’t inherently harmful, but when entire communities default to flattening queer characters into hetero-adjacent roles… it reinforces the idea that same-sex relationships must mimic heteronormativity to be legible.
let characters be messy, loud, and authoritative without straitjacketing them into roles that confuse personality with sexual position.