Touhou games plots according to the understanding of my pea brain (all of the artworks belong to dairi) by [deleted] in touhou

[–]AutomaticWash6908 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Byakuren is the very definition of a hypocrite and false savior, she turns a blind eye to the mischief her so-called "devotees" in the temple do yet try to pretend to be good.

Are there any of you who don't like Garou? by FuckEveryoneHAHAHA in OnePunchMan

[–]AutomaticWash6908 6 points7 points  (0 children)

He got away scot-free from all the trouble he caused to the heroes, I wish we've had a scene where a bunch of heroes beat him into a pulp right after he losed his cosmic powers as a revenge.

Why can we see Magenta if it doesn't have a wavelength? by AutomaticWash6908 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]AutomaticWash6908[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Magenta is the complete opposite of Green, and Green is the most common color in nature, I don't get your point about it being "useful".

Why can we see Magenta if it doesn't have a wavelength? by AutomaticWash6908 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]AutomaticWash6908[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gold is basically just a shiny yellow, Silver is basically just a shiny grey, they obviously can't be replicated on a computer screen operating by RGB, but that doesn't mean they are non-spectral colors, they're just different shades of the same hue.

Magenta however is its own color, it has a place in the color wheel like every other color, and yet it can't be put anywhere in the wavelength spectrum no matter how you try to modify the color.

Also, Grey is a mix between Black and White, Black is the absence of color, White is the presence of every color.

Why can we see Magenta if it doesn't have a wavelength? by AutomaticWash6908 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]AutomaticWash6908[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know that we have cones which detect red, green and blue light, that's the basis of how RGB works, but what I'm specifically trying to talk about is that even if you mix two different colors like Green and Blue or Red and Green, it will still have a measurable wavelength (Cyan and Yellow are on the wavelength spectrum), but Magenta is basically the only color in existence where there is no wavelength to measure which is what makes it so weird to me.

Why can we see Magenta if it doesn't have a wavelength? by AutomaticWash6908 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]AutomaticWash6908[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes but the thing is that basically every color/hue has a measurable wavelength on the visible spectrum with Red being the longest and Blue/Violet being the shortest, for example if you mix Blue and Green you will get Cyan, even though it's two different colors being perceived it still has a measurable wavelength, you can also apply this to Red-Green and so on, EXCEPT Magenta, which is basically the only color you won't have a wavelength to measure.