actually the main reason i think gi-hun is a good person despite his flaws is because of this:
after all that happened in the first games and he was able to go home with the money to pay for his mothers treatment, he found his mother dead. any other person would be broken and would have likely ended their life at some point or become completely destroyed.
but what does he do? he picks himself up and once he realizes the games are still going on, he dedicates his life to making sure no one else has to go through this.
yet people want to complain about him not getting on that plane. yes his daughter deserves to have her father in her life, but her life isn’t threatened and she has a stable support system. he was willing to actively risk his life to save hundreds of others from death and trauma.
i dont care what yall say. gi hun has a good heart and doesn’t deserve some of the hate he gets.
me core
THE LAST OF US
tv show / video game
the fanfiction in my head is soooo good wish you guys could see this
the most beautiful moment in life
— Enzo Silon Surin
oh he KNOWS he hot
#you can call him jay
Thank you all so much for the support on the vinyls!!! As I’m sure you’ve all noticed, this was certainly a limited pressing, so in order to make sure as many of you get a copy as possible, the most efficient way to get it is to ask for it!!!
Email/ask Amigo Records/Prescription Songs, AWAL, and whatever vinyl distributor/record store you frequent!! Tell them how much you want more pressings of the vinyl, and tell them how much you’d like CDs and cassettes as well!
Thanks so much again, we’re gonna do everything we can to make sure all of you can hold Preacher’s Daughter in your hand somehow. Loves ya ♡
not to be "comment on fanfic even if they are oooold"
But I just read a pretty good fic published in 2014-2015 (you know, roughly TEN YEARS AGO) and I was like, damn this is so cool, I have to leave a comment, even if you know, they probably wont see it...
The author replied less than an hour later.
“Life is an ocean of chaos and the realization that you are the one supposed to throw the buoy while struggling to stay afloat is devastating.”
Detachment (2011), dir. Tony Kaye.