ojisans: (14)
rikachu. ([personal profile] ojisans) wrote in [community profile] ponponpon2026-02-11 02:20 am

☆ 42 i don't know how to tell you



151x trigun stargaze ep 05 (vash, wolfwood, meryl, milly)

that I feel safe when you say 'shotgun' )
littlefics: Three miniature books standing on an open normal-sized book. (Default)
littlefics ([personal profile] littlefics) wrote in [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles2026-02-10 01:05 pm
Entry tags:

Authors Revealed!

Authors are now revealed, with 335 fics in the collection as of this post! Many thanks to all who participated in this round, especially our wonderful pinch hitters. <3

Reveals doesn't mean you should stop reading and commenting, so we hope you continue to enjoy this round's drabbles.
mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-10 07:08 pm

Jan 30: Enoshima Aquarium

Album

Finally got into the aquarium. 2800 yen. Sort of worth it. Lots of photos. Dolphin show; types of sand; giant tank; jellyfish room; spider crabs; deep sea recreation tanks (did not photo well); turtles; submersible exhibit. I'm skeptical the dolphins and seals have enough room.

Jellyfish:

VID20260130163353

Tank video:

VID20260130162536

mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-10 07:00 pm

Jan 26: Odakyu to Yamato

Album

Went for a walk to the station, on a whim took the Odakyu line north toward Sagami-Oto, rather than south to Enoshima. I figured I'd see stuff from the tracks, maybe come back. Then we pulled into Yamato station, and the name was provocative (old name for Japan), and I thought I saw something interesting, so got off.

Read more... )

ellerean: (ellerean)
ellerean ([personal profile] ellerean) wrote2026-02-09 09:33 pm
Entry tags:

[Fic] Settlers of Talrega, chapter 4

Commander Shiharam crossed into Daein with a vow: a better life for his soldiers and his family.

These are the chronicles of one man’s rise and fall, and the legacy of those he left behind.


[ first chapter | current chapter ]

fandom: Fire Emblem 9/10
Characters: Shiharam, Haar, Jill, various other Daeins, OCs
rating: M
Chapters: 4/10

Author's notes, part II )
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modzilla ([personal profile] modzilla) wrote in [community profile] fffx2026-02-10 03:29 pm
Entry tags:

New & Consolidated PHs: #18, 28, 32, 39, 53, 55, 57, 62, 64-68

The following pinch hits are due at 11:59pm EST, Wednesday 25 February. To claim, please reply with your AO3 name, and let me know which recipient/PH number you want. You're also welcome to claim by emailing mod.modzilla@gmail.com.

Minimum requirements: An art gift must be a completed comic at least 10 pages or 40 panels long; a fic gift must be a story at least 10,000 words long. You can also fulfil a pinch hit by giving two complete half-length works, if your recipient has opted into that for the fandom(s) you are creating in. Any work must be for a fandom your recipient has requested and one character/relationship/worldbuilding tag requested in that fandom, and must avoid their DNWs.

Pinch hits can now be claimed in 5k or 20-panel increments if the recipient has opted into receiving half-length works. Please say in your claim if you're claiming a pinch hit for 5k (fic) or 20 panels (comic), and for what fandom.



PARTLY CLAIMED - Pinch hit #18 - fic - Nantucket Trilogy - S.M. Stirling, Crossover Fandom x2 [Grimm TV/Guardian TV, Grimm TV/Christabel - Coleridge], 长公主在上 | Zhǎng Gōng Zhǔ Zài Shàng (Web Series), 绅探 | Detective L (TV) )
This pinch hit can be fulfilled by one 5,000-word story, for some requests - please check individual request details

Pinch hit #28 - art, fic [varies by request] - Hazbin Hotel (Cartoon) x2, Overwatch (Video Game), Slow Horses (TV), Brew Solves - Fandom, Dangan Ronpa Series, Death Note (Anime & Manga) )

Pinch hit #32 - fic - Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (TV), Murder She Wrote, Jem and the Holograms (Cartoon), G.I. Joe (Cartoon), Voltron: Lion Force (1984) )

PARTLY CLAIMED - Pinch hit #39 - fic - Stargate Atlantis, Kolja | Kolya (1996), Cesta do pravěku | Journey to the Beginning of Time (1955), Jurassic Park Original Trilogy (Movies) )

This pinch hit can be fulfilled with one 5k story.

Pinch hit #53 - art, fic - Star Wars: The Bad Batch (Cartoon), Star Wars: Ahsoka (TV), Star Wars: Rebels, Star Wars: Resistance (Cartoon), Crossover Fandom [Star Wars Sequel Trilogy/Star Wars: Ahsoka] )

PARTLY CLAIMED - Pinch hit #57 - fic - Stranger Things (TV 2016) x2, Cool Runnings (1993), Real Genius (1985), Bandom, Good Omens (TV) )

This pinch hit can be fulfilled with one story of 5,000+ words

Pinch hit #62 - art, fic - 少年歌行 | The Blood of Youth (Live Action TV), 莲花楼 | Mysterious Lotus Casebook (TV), 琅琊榜 | Nirvana in Fire (TV), 伪装者 | The Disguiser (TV), 少年白马醉春风 | Dashing Youth (Live Action TV), 杀破狼 | Sha Po Lang - priest )

PARTLY CLAIMED - Pinch hit #64 - art, fic - Fandom For Robots - Vina Jie-Min Prasad, Lord Peter Wimsey - Dorothy L. Sayers, Rivers of London - Ben Aaronovitch, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, 将军在上 | Oh My General (TV), Star Wars Legends: Thrawn Trilogy - Timothy Zahn, The Goblin Emperor Series - Katherine Addison )

This pinch hit can be fulfilled by one 5,000+ word story or one 20-panel comic for some requests - please check individual request tags

Pinch hit #65 - fic - Columbo, Criminal Minds (US TV), Grey's Anatomy, Miss Marple - Agatha Christie, NCIS: Los Angeles, SEAL Team (TV), Sherlock (TV) The Professionals (TV 1977) )

Pinch hit #66 - fic - KinnPorsche: The Series (TV), 괴담에 떨어져도 출근을 해야 하는구나 - 백덕수 | Even If I Fall Into a Ghost Story I Still Have to Go to Work - Baek Deoksoo, 내가 키운 S급들 - 근서 | S-Classes that I Raised - Geunseo, 전지적 독자 시점 - 싱숑 | Omniscient Reader - Sing-Shong, 人渣反派自救系统 - 墨香铜臭 | The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù )

PARTLY CLAIMED - PH #67 - art, fic [varies by request] - Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 (Video Game), Original Work, Crossover Fandom [Brooklyn 99 & The Labyrinth], Hades (Supergiant Games Video Games) )

This pinch hit can be fulfilled by one 5,000+ word story or one 20-panel comic for some requests - please check individual request tags

PH #68 - fic - Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV), Sunrise On The Reaping - Suzanne Collins, Hunger Games Trilogy - Suzanne Collins, Captain America (Chris Evans Movies), Black Widow (Movie 2021), We Were Liars - E. Lockhart, Stranger Things (TV 2016), Wednesday (TV 2022), Agatha All Along (TV), Crossover Fandom [DCEU & MCU] )



See below cut for CLAIMED pinch hits!
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2026-02-09 10:12 pm

Fanfiction: Middle Ground (The Goes Wrong Show, Robert/Chris)

Riona: Okay, I've almost finished this fic; the end is in sight! Now I just need you guys to—
Chris and Robert: Destroy our relationship, right?
Riona: NO

It took some wrestling to deal with the damage the characters (in true Goes Wrong fashion) insisted on doing, but I managed to get the fic finished in the end!


Title: Middle Ground
Fandom: The Goes Wrong Show
Rating: 14
Pairing: Robert/Chris
Wordcount: 3,900
Summary: Robert is in love. Chris isn't. They sleep together anyway. This is probably a great idea.

Middle Ground )
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recognito ([personal profile] recognito) wrote2026-02-09 02:04 pm
Entry tags:

More Manga

I finished my three-part (or two and one part in three…?) review of Shimura thinking, "Wow, I've purged the demon! I can read other manga!" but it's really hard?? In the time that I'm writing this, I've flipped back to Sweet Blue Flowers to evaluate the Viz translation and, you know, I've done little partial rereads to get a good look at her panels and art evolution...

I have been able to tear myself away from Shimura's works to reread Yotsuba&!, a series with absolutely superb comic art decisions (visual complexity vs. simplification, the rhythm and arrangement of panels and images, constructing just enough of a narrative to give us the sense that time is passing without shoehorning a narrative that makes no sense for the story it wants to tell). I mean, we all know Yotsuba&!'s strengths as a comic. I feel like I don't have any urge to review it… I just like it and want to reread it all the time… Also reread/caught up with Skip and Loafer, which is somehow totally faithful to the emotion of being fifteen/sixteen. Also finished the fantastic Ikoku Nikki, which will be getting its own little write up and review later.

I still am reading other books, but reading and writing about manga's keeping the novel engine humming. This post covers three series: Yuria-sensei's Red String of Fate by Kiwa Irie and Run Away with Me, Girl and My Sister's Friend, both by Battan.

Yuria-sensei's Red String of Fate ) Run Away with Me, Girl and My Sister's Friend )

 


ryulynn: erika drawing 032425 (Default)
ryulynn ([personal profile] ryulynn) wrote2026-02-09 08:23 am

2026 gaming post #4

Quick list of what I'm playing now before I write up some Lucky Dog 1 and Neon Clash thoughts

-Kanon (switch version), Ayu's route. Last route of the replay.
-Lady in Mystery, a korean indie yuri VN. Not playing it in Korean, though (still need to level up my skills). Using some of the same free music tracks that seabed did lol
-Moekan. Into Fuyuha's route now.
-Monochrome Mobius. Not too far in. Playing this JRPG to figure out if I'll want to pick up the next game in the series releasing in May?
-Twilight Aqua City. Newest BLVN from Holicworks that released Jan 30.

replay routes are Cecil in Shingakkou and Kuroba in Olympia Soiree

lucky dog 1 - tldr know what it is going for before deciding to nab it
Lucky Dog 1 thoughts after finishing main routes )

neon clash - tldr solid otome, gotta be okay with some violence and some misogyny-adjacent* stuff (also because mafia) though
Neon Clash thoughts )

Anyway I hope to be posting about games a bit more regularly since I am still playing them at a good rate! Hopefully an update in a week or two?
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seekingferret ([personal profile] seekingferret) wrote2026-02-09 09:12 am

(no subject)

Cathedrals of Science by Patrick Coffey

I picked it up because Wikipedia says Gilbert Lewis was nominated for a Nobel Prize 41 times and never won and I was like, there's gotta be a story there. I couldn't find a bio of Lewis, but I did find this, which is a group bio of Lewis and a cohort of physical chemists who revolutionized chemistry in the early 20th century. Lewis is joined in the main cast by Arrhenius and Nernst and Langmuir and Seaborg, all names I'd heard before but didn't really know.

Lewis had some Massachusetts blue blood, but he grew up in Nebraska before returning to attend Harvard and finishing his studies in Europe. And it seems clear that he was always a bit of a social oddball, even once he established himself as the king of chemistry at Berkeley.

The book has some serious parts when it covers the intersection of chemistry and the world wars, and Lewis's strange and tragic death, but mostly it's about how amazingly petty chemists are. I loved reading about how they kept stealing credit from each other for discoveries and doing backroom deals to keep each other from winning Nobel prizes.

To be clear, because I still don't understand how Nobel Prizes are awarded, it's not that Lewis was nominated in 41 years and never won. He received nominations from 41 people over a span of something like 25 years, for multiple discoveries and theoretical advancements in the field. He also devoted those 25 years, and the 20 before, to publically trashing the science of several of the people who decided who would win the prize, or had influence on the decides. Coffey digs up amazing documentary evidence of the coordinated campaign against Lewis, but also makes you think maybe you don't blame them for it.

Anyway, a long running theme in this journal is the way science doesn't move in a sphere of pure ideas but is instead a function of imperfect personalities in collision, and this was a brilliant illumination of that theme.

And if you just think Chemistry: The Soap Opera sounds fun, this is the book for you.
qian: Tiny pink head of a Katamari character (Default)
倩 ([personal profile] qian) wrote2026-02-09 01:43 pm
Entry tags:

Pineapple tart update, with recipes

My entire weekend got swallowed up by pineapple tarts, as I decided to make the tarts on Sunday. I made two batches of pastry, one batch with cheese and one without, following this recipe. I basically ignored the family for much of the day in order to do this, but still had to take various breaks to make lunch for the kids, eat myself, tidy up, intervene in quarrels, etc. So there were various shenanigans by way of: had to stop making tarts so put pastry in the fridge for too long and it had turned into granite by the time I returned to it; someone must have butt-dialled the oven so it wasn't the temperature I set it at and the tarts came out darker than they should be; threw away the egg wash then remembered I had 6 remaining tarts to egg-wash so they only got a milk wash and are not as pretty; etc. etc.

The cheesy batch of pastry in particular was terribly stiff and hard to work with; I couldn't roll it without it cracking all over. I think I might have overworked the dough? In any case, my pastry doesn't seem to come together the way What to Cook Today suggests it will, so I'm going to put a rewritten recipe for pineapple tarts below -- what worked for ME. Fortunately the resulting tarts all taste great. I keep eating them to try to figure out if I like cheese-free or cheesy better, but it's hard to decide!

Pineapple jam recipe )

Pineapple tarts recipe )
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2026-02-09 11:15 am

You Will Rue This Day.

The concept and characters of The Goes Wrong Show, the BBC theatrical comedy series best known for making me completely lose my mind, originated with The Play That Goes Wrong, an actual stage show that's been running in the West End for over a decade. And, well, I do live in London; if I'm going to go insane over a theatre fandom, I might as well take advantage of that!

Which is to say that Tem, Rei and I went to see The Play That Goes Wrong at the Duchess Theatre last night. It was a lot of fun!

During our meal before the play, my housemates teased me a fair bit for my nerves about seeing my blorbo Robert Grove in person. I tried to express that it was less nerve-racking than seeing him on stage in Christmas Carol Goes Wrong a few weeks ago, when he was actually played by the role's originator, Henry Lewis, the handsomest man in the world.

Riona: It'll be fine. I've already seen him in hard mode. (realising what I've just said) ...so to speak.

I ended up blushing very badly over the course of this conversation.

Tem: You're glowing, Riona. Almost like you've had a rendezvous with the handsomest man in the world and you have some news to share.

The actor playing Robert was good in the role - he was very recognisably the same character, and he had a good strong voice, which I think is essential; you're just not Robert Grove if you're not acting as loudly as possible - but I was tragically unhot for him. It's not your fault, sir; you've got stiff competition. So to speak.


Notes on seeing The Play That Goes Wrong on stage. )


It's interesting to watch The Play That Goes Wrong, which was the first major Goes Wrong production, and which the creators presumably assumed at the time would be the only major Goes Wrong production. It's very focused on the technical side of things going wrong, with the characters taking more of a back seat (although the characters are still very much there even at this early stage; everyone was easily recognisable despite being played by different actors), and it tries to cram in every disaster it possibly can. By contrast, Christmas Carol Goes Wrong, their most recent stage production (not to be confused with the television special of the same name, which had a completely different script), was very character-focused and a lot more restrained when it came to things actually going wrong.

I really enjoy the 'things technically going wrong' aspect; it's a lot of fun, and always beautifully timed! But I'm also glad that, over time, the Goes Wrong universe has started to focus a little more on the characters themselves; I think it helps to keep the concept fresh.
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lettersmod ([personal profile] lettersmod) wrote in [community profile] unsent_letters_exchange2026-02-08 10:47 pm
Entry tags:

Unsent Letters 2026

Unsent Letters 2026 will run according to the schedule below:

2026 Schedule


Nominations: Feb 18 - Feb 25
Sign-ups: Feb 26 - Mar 7
Assignments out by: Mar 9
Assignments due: Apr 25
Collection opens: May 2
Authors revealed: May 9

All deadlines are 11:59pm UTC.

Exchange rules, including the epistolary format categories, can be found here.

See you at the post office!
cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2026-02-08 07:08 pm

The Jewish War: Preface

This week: All right! As a preface to Josephus Book Club, I am just reading the preface this week and we will do a bigger chunk starting this next week (see below). The preface is just a few pages long (I'm reading up until what in Oxford is paragraph 30, "All of these contents are set forth in seven books... I shall now begin my narrative as indicated at the start of my summary.")

I'm sure you all will have deeper things to say than I do about this, but wow I am just amused by how Josephus just starts out pulling no punches about how annoying and inferior he thinks the other historians are. (The footnote to The historians of this war fall into two categories... hearsay... or distort the facts namechecks Justus, who featured prominently as a frenemy in Feuchtwanger's Josephus trilogy.) I do like his logic in saying, hey, if you want to make the Romans look good, why make the Jewish side look feeble? Also his logic in saying, hey, actually, it makes more sense to be writing contemporary accounts for which one has eyewitnesses, as opposed to writing about ancient history "as if the ancient historians had failed to give their own accounts sufficient finesse," lol. (Although I guess that is what academic historians do!)

Titus Caesar is also namechecked, lookin' good.

The footnotes also say that historiographical writers generally claimed impartiality, so Josephus talking about his personal feelings of sorrow here is atypical, which I thought was interesting.

In fact, looking over the whole sweep of history, I would say that the sufferings of the Jews have been greater than those of any other nation -- and no foreign power is to blame. Oooooof. I guess that's a good tagline to pique interest in the book, though...

(I'm really glad I read Feuchtwanger's Josephus books first to orient myself, though!)

Next week: We'll start Book 1! [personal profile] selenak advised that we read up to Herod the Great's killing his favorite wife. My Oxford edition has "verse"/paragraph numbers but not chapter numbers as selenak's has, but I think (selenak, please let me know if this is incorrect) in my edition the idea is to read up to paragraph 443/444: Maddened by unbridled jealousy, Herod ordered the immediate execution of them both. Remorse quickly followed rage: his anger subsided, and his love was rekindled. The heat of his desire for her was so intense that he could not believe she was dead...

WELL ALL RIGHT THEN. I can see we have lots of sensationalistic gossip ahead of us!
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cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2026-02-08 07:05 pm

An Academic Affair (McAlister)

[personal profile] thistleingrey mentioned that it was a solid depiction of academia and characters in academia, which immediately piqued my interest. I have read Ali Hazelwood's The Love Hypothesis and enjoyed it, and I know Hazelwood is in academia, but I sometimes thought... well, let's just say that it's a romance between a grad student and the young hotshot professor in her department, and... okay... that part... is totally realistic actually... but I feel like I kind of got stuck a lot in all my feelings about the potential deep pitfalls. Hypothesis was also, I think, much more concerned with primarily being a romance novel and secondarily a novel about academia.

Anyway, this is unabashedly a romance novel, complete with marriage-of-convenience and sometimes even the one-bed trope, but without any particular kinks like professor/student :P But the thing that makes it interesting (to me) is that it's at least as interested in both the experiences of the precariat (*) and also familial relationships as it is in the romance itself. In fact, it does not have a conventional romantic Act 3; here the Act 3, as well as the understandable but frustrating misunderstandings that prolong it, is passed squarely on to the familial relationships rather than the romantic ones. Which I personally really like!

The two main characters, Jonah and Sadie, are adorably academics. (**) I laughed out loud when Jonah said, "I'm all for radically revised gender roles in the heteronormative institution of marriage, but I should still pay for my wife's engagement ring," if only because I've never heard anyone else talk that way in a romance novel -- though if you have, please rec it to me. (Their engagement is the aforementioned engagement-of-convenience and the ring is $27.99, I hasten to append, and she pays for his ring.) (lol, I think I actually paid for my engagement ring, because it was an important transaction involving me and an important piece of jewelry -- what?)

Anyway, I rarely like romance novels, but I liked this one!

(*) I did not know the term precariat: the precarious proletariat, that insecure class of unstable work and low wages -- but I was familiar at least by reputation with the academic pre-tenure-track life that the term describes, in the sense that it is one of the many reasons why I did not pursue academia

(**) Jonah likes using footnotes; I guess your mileage may vary but I found it adorable, perhaps inevitably
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2026-02-08 09:10 pm

(no subject)

By sheer coincidence, I ended up reading Alix Harrow's The Everlasting almost immediately after The Isle in the Silver Sea. Both books are ringing changes on the same big themes -- the narratives of nationalism, fate and tragedy, Spenser and Malory, depressed lady knights and evil girlbosses -- and from what I had previously read of both Harrow and Suri's work I was tbh quite surprised to find myself liking The Everlasting a bit better.

The premise of The Everlasting: it's more or less the second-world equivalent of the 1920s and we have just had a Big War. Our protagonist Owen has a radical pacifist alcoholic father that he doesn't respect, a war medal that he didn't really earn, a academic career that doesn't seem to be going places, and a face that makes it pretty obvious that at least one parent came from The Other Side. However, his messy relationship with the war has not in any way altered his ardent passion for the greatest figure of his country's nationalist mythology, the knight Una Everlasting, who fought at the side of the nation's founding queen a thousand years ago and died tragically to bring the country stability.

Then he finds a book that purports to be the True History of Una Everlasting, and gets summoned to a secret meeting with the country's minister of war, an evil girlboss who immediately sends him back in time to experience and document Una Everlasting's Last Quest first hand. He gets to write the nationalist myth himself! What fun!

Alas, it turns out that the great knight Una Everlasting is violent, brutal, and extremely burned out about all the people she's killed as part of the bloody process of nation-forging: at this point the citizens think of her as a butcher and she's inclined to agree. Nonetheless, fanboy Owen convinces her to take on this one last quest for the sake of her honor & kingdom & legacy &cetera, with the promise of peace at the end of it, knowing full well that the end of the quest will in fact mean her death.

This is the first section of the book and tbh I enjoyed it enormously. Owen is writing the narrative in first person and his voice is used to great effect: he's a twisted-up and self-contradictory character who shows the problems of nationalism much better as a guy who's genuinely trying to convince himself that he believes in it than he would if he started out already enlightened. I love his embarrassing radical pacifist dad and his judgmental thesis advisor, and, as heterosexualities go, I am absolutely not immune to the allure of large violent depressed woman/weaselly little worm man whom she could easily break in two who is obsessed with her but also fundamentally betraying her. If the book had ended at the end of its first section, I think it would have been a phenomenal standalone novella.

However, the book does keep going. I continued to have a good time, more or less, but the more it went on the more I felt that it had sort of overplayed its hand. Alix Harrow is extremely a Power of Fiction author in ways that didn't fully work for me in the other book of hers I read; I do appreciate that this book is the Power of Fiction [derogatory] but I still think that perhaps she is giving fiction a little too much power ... For the length of ninety pages I was willing to role with the importance of The Great Nationalist Myth, but the longer it went on and the deeper and more recursive it got with its timeloops the more I was like 'wait .... we only have one founding myth? changing the myth really directly and immediately impacts the future in predictable and manipulable ways and is in fact the only thing that does so? Hmm. Well."

Also I enjoyed the evil girlboss right up until it was revealed that every evil girlboss in the country's whole thousand-year-old history had been the very self-same evil girlboss and no other woman had ever done anything. You are telling me you have built up a whole thing about this country's founding myth of the Queen And Her Lady Knight from scratch and that didn't change the country's relationship to gender at all? NO other woman was ever inspired to do anything with that? I am not sure that's as feminist as you think it is ...

Anyway, I do think this book and The Island In the Silver Sea form a sort of spiritual duology and I'm glad to have read them back to back: for such similar books they have really interestingly different flaws and virtues.
mgsx_mod: (MGS - ocebbkaz)
mgsx_mod ([personal profile] mgsx_mod) wrote in [community profile] mgsx2026-02-08 09:19 pm
Entry tags:

DEADLINE EXTENSION!

Our creators need some more time to create their assignments, so there will be a 1 week extension!

Anon reveals will be on Monday, February 16th

If you are done with your assignment, this is a great time to do some extra read-overs or touch ups on your art piece! Or, if you're feeling risky, try your hand at a treat?