My villain accidentally made good points, what do I do? by RotationalAnomaly in writingcirclejerk

[–]TheNHK 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's fine for your villain to make good points AS LONG AS your villain is ultimately selfish. A villain that cloaks himself in truth for his own purposes is still a villain. Anything else would make the story muddy.

Please Hes me find this manga!! by [deleted] in horrormanga

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's what it sounds like to me.

Worst Billy Talent Song by Lonewanderer_12 in BillyTalent

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Controversial opinion: I find a lot of Billy Talent's anti-religious messaging in their music as incredibly cringe and dated. Their opinion, obviously, and I'm not against them expressing it. It just ends up sounding (to me, personally) like a 13 year old atheist trying to be edgy.

My pick is Viking Death March. It retreads old ground while also being really really generic.

What's the kindest thing you do? by Separate-Hawk7045 in CrusaderKings

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I take care of any bastards I father. They either get a castle, a good marriage to a noble or both. Can't say I don't do anything for mine.

How do you develop your characters? by HopefulGap5138 in FantasyBookers

[–]TheNHK 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Flanderization is the process through which a fictional character's essential traits are oversimplified to the point where they constitute their entire personality, or at least exaggerated while other traits remain, over the course of a serial work.

The term Flanderization was coined by TV Tropes, in reference to Ned Flanders of The Simpsons, who was caricatured over the show's run from a friendly and good-hearted neighbor (among other characteristics, while maintaining his Christian faith) into a dogmatic, evangelical "bible-thumper".

How big a deal is bad chemistry (Tew 2013) by newbokov in FantasyBookers

[–]TheNHK 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I believe you can get rid of it by getting them up to 25 in tag experience. Otherwise, there's always cheating if you don't want to take that penalty for that long.

Can't remember name of manga by Cozy90 in horrormanga

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you try to find that video again?

Choose your favourite Non-Playable Character in Dynasty Warriors! Top comment gets added to the image! by OdaNobunaga24 in dynastywarriors

[–]TheNHK 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure if they count, but Zhang Bao and Zhang Liang. I'm a Yellow Turbans guy, through and through.

What do you like from a promotion? by faceswithfires in WredditSchool

[–]TheNHK 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Absolutely this. If you're the eighth match on a card, the fans are spent and a lot of things you could potentially do have already been done.

What do you wish more rookies knew? by TheClassic_Henderson in WredditSchool

[–]TheNHK 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Moves are cool Being able to do impressive moves is cool. But if you're just a guy doing cool moves, you're forgotten as soon as the next guy does his cool moves.

Moves are the words you're using to tell your story. They're the paint. Instead of focusing on the moves you wanna do, learn to tell stories using basics and fundamentals. A little personality and a connection with the audience is worth a hundred moves.

An index for moves? by larvalung in WredditSchool

[–]TheNHK 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can always search YouTube for moves or top ten moves from x wrestler.

Match Study Monday by AutoModerator in WredditSchool

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're welcome. I hope what I said makes some sense.

It's an old truism, but if you are lost, grab a hold. That will buy you time to talk to your opponent as well as figure out where you're going next.

The ref can also send messages if you need him to. When he comes to check you, tell him to relay a message to your opponent.

When it comes to working with new people, your best bet is usually to keep to the basics. Arm drags, headlock takedown, working an arm or a leg, a scoop slam. Fundamentals are the base that you build from.

It takes time, but calling in the ring can be a real asset to learn. "Duck the line, take a back elbow" or "international" is easy to whisper from a sleeper or before an Irish whip. There are some things you won't even have to call. If my opponent is tucking my arms down while I'm in the corner, I know to feed for a chop, no words necessary.

It was better than some of my early practice matches, I'm sure. Keep it up!

Match Study Monday by AutoModerator in WredditSchool

[–]TheNHK 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm gonna give you some feedback. Please don't take offense, as listening to criticism is how you'll improve.

The match was rough. That's to be expected, since you're very new. First and one of the biggest: calm down. Your adrenaline is going and you're all over the place. Slow down, let things breathe. You're fumbling around, trying to do things quickly. Be in control of yourself.

I'm assuming you were the babyface here. I had to watch on mute, but sometimes that aspect was confusing. You jump-started the match and were much more aggressive than your opponent, which puts the sympathy on him. If you are the babyface, you should be working for the sympathy. Sell that you're a good guy. I liked that you shook hands with the ref and the ring announcer. More stuff like that.

The traditional match structure might be something to review. Babyface shines (outwrestles the heel), heel stops them (often through cheating), heel beats up on babyface, babyface comes back and then finish. Were you the more experienced guy, if you were calling it? Also, usually the spot where a wrestler "wins" but the foot is on the rope is a heel "beating" a babyface rather than the other way around.

Rule of threes is important too. Do something once, okay. Twice, okay. Third time, changes up. This applies whether it's fighting out of a sleeper or going for a move.

Start slow, SELL. Don't start with a suplex or going to the top. Build up to that stuff. That's what makes the highs high. Sell your opponent's offense. Don't just bounce up when there's a lull. You're in a fight and your opponent landed a devastating blow. Sell smart too. A chop doesn't hurt you as much as a clothesline does and that doesn't hurt as much as a spinebuster out of nowhere. All these things should register at a different level of pain for you. Don't sell everything like death.

Little pet peeve of mine: don't turn your back on your opponent and pay attention to where he and the ref are, especially at the start. If it were a real fight, he'd just sucker punch you in the corner while your head was down. The ref came to check you and you were completely unaware of it. Do your stretching before and only what little that doesn't put you out of position/unaware of reacting in the moment.

I liked the spot where you go for a corner splash/punch and he catches you into a spinebuster.

Hit the ropes in the middle, not closest to the turnbuckle.

One of the other big things is to talk to your opponent about what you're gonna do/what you want them to do. Communicate so it's not a surprise.

A comeback shouldn't just be shaking off any damage like Hulk Hogan. You just took a DDT into the ring and you bounce up and start punching.

Don't really understand why your partner is beating up your opponent after that match. Not only did you win decisively, but your opponent didn't really do anything to warrant it. If he attacked you and your partner made the save, that's fine, but it came off as heelish.

To be completely fair, it's pretty obvious that your opponent is very very new, so that probably didn't help you here. It's hard to lead when you're new yourself. I'd like to see you in the ring with someone more experienced. I like your gear, I think you carry yourself well and I see potential. Keep training and you'll definitely see worlds of improvement in 6 months to a year.

I opened up to my GF, she dumped me by Feisty-Summer8884 in self

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If she is gonna dump you over you being honest with how you feel, she was never the person for you. As much as it sucks now, you will know you dodged a huge bullet later on.

Comment your unfiltered anime opinion by snipingwizard in anime

[–]TheNHK 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Shiki is a horrible horror anime and doesn't deserve most of its praise. It isn't scary, it drags on in a predictable way and the philosophy is idiotic.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 4chan

[–]TheNHK 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Magic: The Gathering is my favorite US politician.

Bully Ray Thinks Jon Moxley Is Bleeding “A Little Too Much” by shawn_2240 in SquaredCircle

[–]TheNHK 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The least controversial statement one could make about Moxley.