Does anyone have any book/ movie and tv show recommendations that fit these requests?
- Very large scale major conflict, but lots of internal & character conflicts
- Unique characters!!!
- Not a snooze fest (I have ADHD)
- Interesting vibe and fun worldbuilding
- Stuff kinda like Andor and Game of Thrones, (sci-fi/ fantasy politics)
Please and thank you!
i know unicorns are usually silver or lavender with those skinny horse legs built for running but id like to see more unicorns with natural colouration built like tanks like these beasts
Mississippi Masala (1991)
The Jedi Temple is sentient, it is completely alive and also was murdered when Order 66 was issued.
Coruscant people are sure that, after Order 66, the Jedi Temple is haunted (And they are not wrong)
There are many nocturnal species in the Order, and they act almost exactly like their diurnals counterparts. (So, Jedi Order Night Shift).
Jedi children are the most eerie children ever, that kind of kids whom stares at empty spaces and says thing without any logic to most people.
Psychometric Jedi children are on their own league of eerie.
Anyway, they are completey fine between themselves.
Most Jedi are this kind of eerie to, they just manage to keep under control till they are all reunited together in the Temple, then is the Annual Space Wizard Convention of Coruscant.
The Jedi believe that all kind of plants, and even some rocks, are sentient. They do not gift flowers to one another, but pots with alive plants of them.
Actually, flowers bouquets are seem as almost an offense between the Jedi, when they are gifted by someone who is not a Jedi. When they are gifted by a fellow Jedi, then it is clearly an offense.
Revan (not Darth Revan) was Tarre Viszla’s Master.
At some point, Tarre was both, the Manda’lor and the Head of the Jedi Order. This period was very briefly, though.
His full armor was still in the Temple, it was one of the Order’s treasures. Of course, it was complete, except for his lightsaber.
The Miraluka people were also victim of genocide by the Empire, due their natural sense of the Force. Their native planet do not exist anymore.
hitomi mochizuki's youtube channel is filled with so much warmth and love
“There is no word in ancient Sith for “surrender”.”
“So what’s he doing here?”
maybe???? shrugs
VANDER MY LOVE..... hes so fine and for why. to die(?) after 3 episodes
Write that fic
Draw your OC
Redesign that blorbo
Plan that comic how you want
Create the content you want to see
Be cringe
Be free
The only thing that matters is you having fun! Not what others think!
What I was taught growing up: Wild edible plants and animals were just so naturally abundant that the indigenous people of my area, namely western Washington state, didn't have to develop agriculture and could just easily forage/hunt for all their needs.
The first pebble in what would become a landslide: Native peoples practiced intentional fire, which kept the trees from growing over the camas praire.
The next: PNW native peoples intentionally planted and cultivated forest gardens, and we can still see the increase in biodiversity where these gardens were today.
The next: We have an oak prairie savanna ecosystem that was intentionally maintained via intentional fire (which they were banned from doing for like, 100 years and we're just now starting to do again), and this ecosystem is disappearing as Douglas firs spread, invasive species take over, and land is turned into European-style agricultural systems.
The Land Slide: Actually, the native peoples had a complex agricultural and food processing system that allowed them to meet all their needs throughout the year, including storing food for the long, wet, dark winter. They collected a wide variety of plant foods (along with the salmon, deer, and other animals they hunted), from seaweeds to roots to berries, and they also managed these food systems via not only burning, but pruning, weeding, planting, digging/tilling, selectively harvesting root crops so that smaller ones were left behind to grow and the biggest were left to reseed, and careful harvesting at particular times for each species that both ensured their perennial (!) crops would continue thriving and that harvest occurred at the best time for the best quality food. American settlers were willfully ignorant of the complex agricultural system, because being thus allowed them to claim the land wasn't being used. Native peoples were actively managing the ecosystem to produce their food, in a sustainable manner that increased biodiversity, thus benefiting not only themselves but other species as well.
So that's cool. If you want to read more, I suggest "Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge: Ethnobotany and Ecological Wisdom of Indigenous Peoples of Northwestern North America" by Nancy J. Turner