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Published: 2016-06-19 02:50:53 +0000 UTC; Views: 2861; Favourites: 132; Downloads: 0
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Whaddaya think of muscles NOW, Temmie?Related content
Comments: 26
borleias [2016-06-19 15:58:21 +0000 UTC]
Korra has a nice body and I like the colouring. Great work.
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FireballDragon [2016-06-19 14:18:20 +0000 UTC]
You should draw Temmie and Daisy greeting each other. XD
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The-Rebel-Angel In reply to FireballDragon [2016-06-19 21:07:44 +0000 UTC]
HOI! I'm Temmie!
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FireballDragon In reply to The-Rebel-Angel [2016-06-19 23:02:57 +0000 UTC]
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caskatomb [2016-06-19 10:41:18 +0000 UTC]
Now THESE are muscles! caskatomb.deviantart.com/art/Iā¦
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DeadCobra [2016-06-19 10:36:10 +0000 UTC]
Great
She has not so many she still has a smooth body so still atractive
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DebuLover [2016-06-19 03:54:10 +0000 UTC]
eh, not impressed. Took Korra 3 seasons to actually be a 'good' character.
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TheKaozOf1987 In reply to DebuLover [2016-06-30 05:22:08 +0000 UTC]
Me as Kaozilla towering behind you: WANNA HAVE A BAD ENDING?š
Fact: when I am Kaozilla, that means you did something that made me mad; including talking horrible things to people, real or fake, who I care about.
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SemiJuggalo In reply to DebuLover [2016-06-19 14:34:22 +0000 UTC]
Korra may have been very flawed, but she was always a good character. However, the fact that she was able to overcome those flaws is what makes her a great character.
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DebuLover In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-19 22:57:01 +0000 UTC]
Season 2 Korra is something I greatly beg to differ.
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IronBloodAika In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-19 21:06:39 +0000 UTC]
Some people want characters to be bland or perfect. Having a character have flaws and OVERCOME those is apparently too 'unrealistic'. You could see her development from the very start. But NOPE. People just like to harp on flaws and ignore ANY AND ALL progress.
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SemiJuggalo In reply to IronBloodAika [2016-06-19 21:32:09 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! Korra may have had some less-than-admirable traits, but she always had the drive to become so much more. Also, as much as I love Aang, Korra was a far more developed character than him.
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IronBloodAika In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-19 21:55:12 +0000 UTC]
Well it's mostly cause their struggles were different. And Korra wasn't unlikable cause you could tell she was a good person she just needed to adjust to a new setting after spending all her life in compounds training as opposed to past Avatars who were allowed to see the world and interact with people. You could see she was faced with a LOT of different kind of interactions she had no idea how to deal with and was unfamiliar with. So watching her get used to the norm between her job was fascinating to watch.
And again, Aang had his own development, but he had different struggles than Korra did. The threats the face and the regrets they had. So different it's really not something one can compare.
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SemiJuggalo In reply to IronBloodAika [2016-06-19 22:30:05 +0000 UTC]
True, Korra and Aang were both very different from each other, in more ways than one. I just can't stand it when people only focus on Korra's negative traits, while completely ignoring the massive leaps in character development she had undergone. Heck, for all the grief it gets, Book 2 did an outstanding job of breaking Korra down, rebuilding her, and setting her on the path to becoming a better Avatar and person.
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IronBloodAika In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-19 22:34:05 +0000 UTC]
Book 2 had great world building and gave the characters some real development since this was the first immediate threat to the world and Korra getting a much clearer understanding of what the Avatar DOES. And even before character development she wasn't a bad person. I hate how people act like she was a bitch or something.
Really Book 2 was just different, not bad. And Unalaq brings to mind Ozai with how his sense of morality basically comes down to how he views the world. "I think this is the right decision, thus it is".
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SemiJuggalo In reply to IronBloodAika [2016-06-20 01:26:30 +0000 UTC]
In all honesty, considering how Book 1 ended with Korra getting everything handed to her, I totally get why her ego was out of control. Seriously, thanks to Aang, she got her bending back, her Avatar powers were boosted tremendously, and she decided to make it a hat trick by hooking up with the boy of her dreams.
Sure, her spoiled brat phase was pretty bad, but that's what made her development all the more effective. She had to learn the hard way that being the Avatar didn't mean everything would come easy to her. More importantly, she also had to learn humility, as well as not to take her loved ones for granted. All of Korra's experiences in Book 2 resulted in her becoming a much more humble and thoughtful person.
Meanwhile, Mako learned that he was just flat-out bad with women.
As for Unalaq, he was a rather transparent villain, even before it was revealed that he planned on fusing with Vaatu.
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IronBloodAika In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-20 02:12:18 +0000 UTC]
Yeah but the same could be for Ozai. XD There was no real humanity for either of them. XD
Yeah but some people started acting like she was being flippant or didn't care. Thing is even at the start of Season 2 she was doing what she thought was right to help keep the peace but wasn't prepared for all the different groups who were making it impossible and either wanted the war to happen or just flat out ignore the problem. She wanted to prevent a war but found that even as the Avatar she couldn't exactly sway politicians. And even at her 'worst' she never put innocent people in harm's way. Thing was she was still finding her own balance. Aang's situation was completely different than Korra's. Compare that Aang was a diplomat thrown into a world of conflict, while Korra was a fighter thrown into a situation where diplomacy was how things were done. Both had to adjust to new situations and deal with the consequences when their own styles proved ineffective or detrimental.
Mako will find love eventually. XD
But I just hate people talking shit about Korra saying she was unlikable, unsympathetic, or a bitch because she made mistakes and faltered, forgetting that even Aang made mistakes. Something even Bryke where quick to point out. Aang wasn't perfect.
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SemiJuggalo In reply to IronBloodAika [2016-06-20 02:51:48 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, and let's not forget, no matter how many mistakes Korra made, she managed to rectify nearly every single one them. Also, no matter how big Korra's mistakes were, none of them held a candle to those made by previous Avatars...
-Avatar Roku's leniency towards Sozin led to his own downfall, as well as the start of the Hundred Year War.
-Avatar Kyoshi founded the Dai Li, an elite team of earthbenders who turn into the Gestapo at the slightest hint of corruption in the monarchy.
-Avatar Kuruk was far too laid back during peaceful times, so Koh punished him for his lack of diligence by stealing his wife's face.
Aang had to learn from plenty of mistakes, even as a kid, but in LOK, it was solidified that he was definitely NOT perfect. I'm sure he loved Tenzin, Bumi, and Kya very much, but it was quite clear that he played favorites with the airbender. Despite the negative effects this had on the three of them, their interactions as adults were so well written, it showed just how they could still pull together as a family, despite their issues.
No family is perfect, plain and simple.
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IronBloodAika In reply to SemiJuggalo [2016-06-20 03:03:40 +0000 UTC]
Exactly. Also Aang's vacations with Tenzin were really more Airbending training. And yes I can understand all the sibs issues with Aang, but it's clear they did love their dad and they him. But I can also understand Aang's issues to. Until Tenzin was born, Aang WAS the last Airbender. After him, that was it. Everything about his culture, people, and bending would be gone. Once Tenzin was born he NEEDED to insure that that legacy was carried on. Obviously the Air Acolytes would help keep the culture and Air Nomad way of life alive, but the style of Airbending would have been lost to future generations of Avatars. It was a huge burden to be put on Tenzin's shoulders, but it was a burden that only HE could carry when his dad died.
So in here it's a situation I could understand the mind behind everyone there. Same with Toph and her daughters.
Exactly. Korra was one to never ignore a problem, especially if she knew or felt it was her fault.
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