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  1. 2 hours ago, LordCowCow said:

    idk why I didn't ask this before

    AM or FM?

    I had FM in mind when I made the username. Growing up, whenever someone asked me my initials for something, I'd say "FM" and some smart-alek would inevitably say, "Oh, like a radio!" It never became like a nickname or anything -- I never got to be "Radiohead" or anything like that (not that I got into the band or anything) -- and the joke got pretty tired the second or third time it happened, but the idea stuck. Toss in some numbers at the end and bam, a completely functional username. And yeah, it's a little boring, but it's mine.

    In terms of actual radios, yeah, I guess I prefer FM there, too. I don't think there's a special reason, but the stations my parents listened to while I was growing up were always FM stations so maybe I'm just nostalgic.


  2. 15 hours ago, LordCowCow said:

    What sort of anime do you enjoy? If any

    I'm not great with episodic stuff at the moment, to be honest. There was a time when I was, when I could plow through whole seasons at a time, sure, and when I did, it was stuff like Gurren Lagann or Puella Magi Madoka Magica -- stuff that was on Netflix that even I, through osmosis, had heard about. I have watched other series since then -- I think Planetes resides in my top slot at the moment (though I understand that's the "wrong" Sunrise-animated sci-fi show to top lists with) -- but yeah, not really my thing anymore.

    What I have gotten into more is movies. There's a very good independent cinema near-ish me that, while I'm sure it doesn't get every Japanese-animated theatrical release, still does its best to at least be the place to be for the more in-demand ones. They rerun Ghibli movies every so often as well. So that's where I've been getting most of my anime: new releases like Mirai (which was very sweet) and rewatching Spirited Away for, like, the sixth time.

    I'm open to recommendations, though! I might not get to it right away but I do generally like people talking about media they like.


  3. 2 hours ago, Yui said:

    Fitting first question for a radio: Favorite genre of music?

    I'd say, "Oh, I like all kinds," but that's a cop-out answer so instead, let's go through some albums I listened to recently. Starting with more acoustic:

    The Attractions of Youth by Barns Courtney. Wikipedia lists Barns as "Folk-Pop" which I guess works? The album kind of splits that distinction down the middle, with songs like Glitter & Gold and Champion much more pop and songs like Goodbye John Smith and the title track a little more folk-leaning. I admit I like the former more than the latter but I can appreciate both.

    Haunted by Poe. The title track, Not A Virgin, and both versions of Hey  Pretty stand out in particular. I also like the story behind it -- a woman going through tapes her father recorded of her before she died. Or maybe I'm just a huge House of Leaves nerd. Either works.

    Nonagon Infinity by King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. I stuck Robot Stop on one of your "Yui Rates Music" threads, but this album is definitely something to listen to all the way through, letting each song blend into the next until it loops back to the beginning like an endless loop. Other King Giz albums are good too, but this one's my favorite.

    And on the electronic side:

    Studio Killers' self-titled album. Jenny is, of course, very good, and deserves all the attention it gets, but I'm also partial to All Men Are Pigs and Friday Night Gurus.

    Anything by Justice.  ("Cross"), their debut album, can sound half-unfinished, like somewhere along the line they forgot to put in a melody, but I think that's what attracted people to it (and, by extension, the reason some don't like their other two albums), while Audio, Video, Disco and Woman both act as extensions of that same philosophy. There are so many songs I could put here, but special mention has to go to Planisphere, which goes almost 18 minutes and, in my opinion, never gets boring.

    I also have developed strong feelings towards the Eurobeat and Electro-Swing genres. I think I got into those the same way most people do: come for the memes, stay because, hey, some of these songs slap pretty hard. Recommendations for each of these categories would be The Top for Eurobeat and Fear and Delight for Electro-Swing.


  4. Melissa had almost made it! The emphasis was still on “almost,” sure, but her door was in view, at least. She’d had to look away from both the person holding the door for her and the sign right next to them that said DO NOT LET STRANGERS INTO THE DORMS but she had done it and now, finally, only a single door remained. Melissa just hoped Hoshiko was home. She had to be, right? Sure, she seemed like the type of person to stay out late, but it seemed like everybody had been watching the duel. Would Hoshiko really be the sole exception?

    Melissa tried to swallow her fear, but it just got caught on a lump in her throat. Or maybe the fear was the lump? Either way, it kept her standing outside her dorm just a little longer. She did knock eventually, though, just a quick rat-tat-tat before taking a step back and waiting for a response.

    Hoshiko opened the door after only a bit of waiting, though with the towel over her right shoulder and shampoo bottle in her left it looked like Melissa might have been interrupting some pre-bathing preparations. Still, Hoshiko seemed cheerful enough “Hi!” she said, and gestured for Melissa to come inside. “Sooo… how was your day?”

    Um, fine,” said Melissa. She wanted to say more, but she bit her tongue. Was this an actual conversation or small talk? She scratched her head a little. Hoshiko was obviously happy to see her, which was nice, but she couldn’t be sure how much of that was “actually friendly” and not “generally cordial.” But as the silence stretched on, ever increasing in awkwardness, she finally broke. “Sorry to interrupt, um, you’re about to use the shower? I forgot my key this morning and, uh, yeah, that’s why I had to knock,” she said. She almost immediately regretted it, but she said it.

    “Oh don’t worry about it,” Hoshiko said, brushing one of her bangs out of her face. “Well, then it’s pretty fortunate I got here first, right?” She giggled a bit as the two walked into the room. As she closed the door, she continued to speak. “Anyways yeah, I was about to shower. Do you need to use the bathroom before I do?” she said, gesturing towards the restroom. 

    Maybe to scream a little-” She did manage to catch that one, wedging it against the lump in her throat so that it only came out as a coughing fit. That lasted for a good, solid, moment, but when she finally came up for air, she managed to change it to “Maybe just a glass of water.” But of course the coughs came back and she doubled over into her elbow again. With her free arm, she gestured over to her desk where she already had the glass set up. “Could you- sorry.” She hacked out another few coughs. “Sorry, could you get it for me?

    Hoshiko was already on it. “A-Are you okay!?” she said, loud enough to hear over the running tap. Not that she gave Melissa any time to answer; by the time Melissa was ready, Hoshiko was already back, full glass in hand.

    Melissa drained her cup, took a few deep breaths, and looked back at Hoshiko. “Thank you, I’m fine,” she said. “Thanks for the water, I don’t know what, uh, what happened there, sorry. Um, anyway, how was your day?

    “Oh, it was wonderful!” Hoshiko said, whatever concern she’d had clearly melting off her face. “I met some lovely people at the café nearby and saw a beautiful duel!” She looked at Melissa with her head slightly cocked to the side. “Oh, did you see the big duel too?”

    I did,” said Melissa. “I, um, I was actually so close the duel space hit a chips bag I had.” She left out the part where Gabriela went off at Hitomu. She wasn’t going to speak ill of someone she didn’t really know yet.

    She had another cough but was able to get to the sink herself this time. “Sorry,” she said. “Um, oh, I’m keeping you from your shower, aren’t I?

    Hoshiko hopped up on her bed. “No, no! Not at all,” she said. “The shower can wait. I’d rather talk with you right now.” She paused a moment smiling at Melissa, maybe chuckling a little to herself as well. “So, you were at the duel? Shame I didn’t see you there… then again, I didn’t see much of anyone, really. Guess I chose the wrong seat! Make any new friends?”

    Hoshiko was laughing about it, but each laugh just made Melissa feel guiltier and guiltier. Of course Hoshiko was at the duel! She’d been operating most of the day with the “everybody’s at the duel” premise, but for some reason had left Hoshiko out of that “everybody.” Why didn’t she look for her then? Even if Hoshiko had wanted to stay for the duel (Melissa reasoned she wouldn’t be able or willing to convince her otherwise), Melissa finding her would have given her somebody to sit by at the very least. “I’m sorry, I should have looked for you,” Melissa said. But that did remind her of another thought she’d had that day. “Um, we should probably swap numbers so if we do need to find each other, um, we can.” She took out her phone. “I can just, um, do you want mine first?

    “Oh… oh!” Hoshiko said. It looked to Melissa like she was blushing a little too, which was reassuring since, you know, it meant she probably felt at least a little bad about forgetting. It was either that or Hoshiko was faking it, which, while unlikely, was still a thought that wormed its way into Melissa’s head. Either way, Hoshiko had pulled out her phone, which had a vibrant pink case with a small, white bunny hanging off of it. She fiddled around on it for a moment, then looked back up at Melissa and said, “Whenever you’re ready.”

    Okay, it’s, uh, you said you were ready? Uh, six six nine, that’s the area code, and then two two one, six two five one.” As she watched Hoshiko punch in the numbers, she added, “Um, but no, you asked if I’d made any friends, sorry, uh, I met some people, but I’m not sure if we’re actually friends yet. Um, what’s your number?

    “Don’t worry too much about it,” Hoshiko said as she started typing in a text to Melissa. “Meeting people is the first step to making friends, after all!”

    Melissa felt her pocket vibrate. Checking her phone yielded the message:

    Heeeeey, this is Hoshiko. (▰∀◕)ノ

    I’ll, um, thanks,” Melissa said, as she added Hoshiko to her contacts. “I’ll keep that in mind.


    Have mercy on me, Oh Lord, a sinner.
    Wipe away my transgressions,
        and let me be reborn anew in your glory
    Help me turn away from sin,
        and move towards your eternal light.

    Lord, I thank you for today, as I thank you for every day.
    Thank you for giving me the courage to deal with adversity,
        and thank you for the wisdom and insight to show compassion.
    When I rise tomorrow, I ask for that same strength and purity of purpose
        and let me continue to spread your word.

    In the name of The Father, and of The Son, and of The Holy Spirit,
    Amen


    Wednesday, September 13, 909 PD
    Feast of Saint Venerius the Hermit

    “What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them? Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”
    -James 2:14-17 (NIV)


    Connor, Melissa decided, was being kind of a jerk. Instead of the last week’s “go out into the world” approach -- which, while terrible, would at least have been consistent! -- he had set up a sort of shift schedule with not only times for each member of the Community Service Club to man the table, but also times for each of them to go around handing out the leftover pamphlets from last week’s festival. Now, Melissa knew the separate club sign-up “jamborees” (as Connor had put it) weren’t entirely his fault, but she still blamed him for basically creating obligations for her without her consent. She wouldn’t have minded so much if it weren’t for, well, the exact same reasons that had made last week’s a struggle to get through.

    There was one benefit, though. Because Connor had gone and given everyone specific times they had to be at or near the club booth, that meant for a good long while, at least, she had to be at the booth. None of this wandering through crowds stuff, and with comparatively fewer people looking to join a comparatively mundane club as oppose to the flashier Duel Team or really any other team, for that matter, that meant she had much more time to just be by herself. A whole lot more time to just be.

    It couldn’t last, of course. After what was probably an hour (even if it felt significantly shorter) of half trying to attract new members and half, you know, avoiding even the most casual of glances like the plague, Melissa was in the middle of doing the latter when she felt her phone buzz.

    From: Connor
    To: Melissa, Jennifer, Tim

    Shift change. Jen your up.

    From: Jennifer
    To: Melissa, Connor, Tim

    Brt

    From: Connor
    To: Melissa, Jennifer, Tim

    That means Melissas next on flyers.

    And again she was called into the crowd, which she approached like an agoraphobic swimmer looking out over the diving board. Just like last week, she had a handful of flyers and not really anywhere specific to go. Just like last week, too, she was doing so at the behest of Connor. Unlike last week, though, well, at least she’d been warned in advance this time.

    Jennifer seemed to be in good spirits, at least. “Hiya, Mel!” she said. “How’s things?”

    I dunno, alright,” said Melissa.

    “Any sign-ups?”

    A couple. I don’t think, uh, I don’t think they’ll show up more than a few meetings though. I dunno. Maybe I wasn’t paying too much attention but I thought I could just tell.

    “Huh,” Jennifer said. “I mean, if you say so. You gonna be okay with the flyers stuff? I know crowds aren’t exactly your thing.”

    Oh, you know me,” said Melissa. In her head, she added, “Always making myself miserable,” though she didn’t say it out loud. Instead, she took her pamphlets, gave a quick nod to Jennifer as she took her seat -- the kind of nod that said, “Good luck” and not much else -- took a breath and pressed into the crowd.


    “Pressed into the crowd” was kind of an overstatement. Sure, she really did try, but then she’d get jostled around by people squeezing past her, not even taking notice of the literature in her hand. And when that didn’t happen, she’d picture it happening, people avoiding her outstretched arm as they maneuvered to whatever person or place they deemed more interesting than she.

    Not that Melissa could blame them, of course. She could imagine a world where the roles were switched, and she certainly would avoid as many hands-jammed-in-faces as possible even if one of them did have something she could be interested in.

    Perhaps then, this wasn’t the best tactic. Nobody liked random literature and Melissa certainly didn’t like handing it out. She’d hated it the week before and she hated it now. But a thought did occur to her, the only reason she did it last week was Connor forcing her to reach out to new people (and the ensuing few days certainly had lead to plenty of that!) Now, though, all she had to do was spread the word that the club existed at all. So if she just pinned up a few pamphlets around campus, well, wouldn’t that do the trick?

    Her first stop was CoffeeCards. Surely they had space somewhere to fit a pamphlet or two, she reasoned, and that might attract a few eyeballs if pinned appropriately. It was a quick enough job, though Melissa did have to go back and ask the barista if they had any spare thumbtacks, which was as mortifying a prospect as it sounded. She only managed because the alternative was stealing some already hung up there, which, well, in the battle between guilt and embarrassment, guilt proved the stronger threat.

    As she turned to leave, though she recognized a young woman sitting in the corner of the room, coffee clutched in one hand, some card or another in her other, and another forty cards or so splayed out in seemingly random fashion on the table in front of her. It was the girl that had challenged Hitomu. Her name was Elizabeth, right?

    Again, Melissa hesitated. She really didn’t want to be speaking to too many people at the moment (at every moment?) but, on the other hand, if she didn’t at least approach the girl, the thought that she could have helped in some way would eat at her for the rest of the day. She was representing the Community Service club, right? Shouldn’t she serve her community?

    She’s going to say, ‘I’m fine,’” Melissa thought, or maybe she said it under her breath. “She’s going to hate you for even asking and someone’s going to notice you and laugh at you and suddenly you’re going to be the laughingstock of the whole shop. Maybe even the whole school if someone’s got a camera somewhere.” But even as her voice tried to persuade her against it, Melissa still found herself making her way slowly towards the corner where Elizabeth sat. Pretty soon, Melissa was standing right at the table.

    Um, sorry, are you okay?” Melissa said.


  5. Your Friendly Neighborhood Starly

    Spoiler

    “If I can help even one Pokémon per day, I consider that a day well spent.”

    Name: Felix

    Gender: Male

    Species: Starly

    Appearance:

    Spoiler

     

    yvNpTEz.jpg

    Just your normal, run-of-the-mill Starly.

    Personality:

    Spoiler

    "Is there anything I can do to help?"

    Felix is an optimist, especially when other Pokémon are concerned. He always tries to see the best in those around him, and hopes that they will do the same for him. “Flighty” would probably be a good word to describe this sort of behavior if not for two reasons. The first is that it’s too obvious. Saying he’s too flighty or “a birdbrain” will inevitably be met with a curt "If you’re trying to insult me, you should probably get some new material."

    The second is that he hates flying. Or rather, he hates heights. “It’s really not being high up that bothers me,” he’ll say. “It’s more of the, um, it’s more of the suddenly not being high up anymore that’ll do it.” As a Starly, he’ll still flutter, taking long jumps between bushes or low branches, but he’d really really rather not take actual flight if he can help it.

    Felix is very eager to please. He loves helping out, doing anything he can to make those around him more comfortable. If there’s something you need help with, he wants to be one of the first people you ask. And if he can’t help directly, he’ll try to find someone who can.

    There’s an underlying vanity behind it all, though. Felix needs -- needs -- to be liked. His innate kindness, general cheeriness, and prepared comebacks go a long way, but off-hand remarks and insults still hurt a lot more than one might expect. This is the more negative side of this eager to please attitude. He can’t stand the thought that someone might not always enjoy his company, and will do everything in his (admittedly limited) power to try and correct these thoughts.

    Pokémon Biography:

    Spoiler

    "If you have any questions, any questions at all, you know where to find me!"

    Not old enough to be one of the first humans to arrive in Thicket Forest, not young enough to be one of the newer arrivals, Felix is one of those “in the middle” ones that nobody’s sure what to do with anymore. He’s found his niche in helping other, newer arrivals to Thicket Town, both the Pokémon and humans in Pokémon bodies, making sure that they’re comfortable and, in the case of the latter, helping them come to terms with what’s happened to them.

    Not that he can provide any answers. He doesn’t even really think about it these days. It’s simply a fact of life that, for example, he’s stuck with memories he can’t quite place. It’s a fact of life that he can’t ever truly relate to any of the natural-born Pokémon.

    It’s a fact of life that when rain clouds darken Thicket Town’s night sky to a near-pitch black, he’s plagued by nightmares he can never remember once the storm finally lets up.

    In his better dreams, Felix imagines himself surrounded on all sides by a hard shell, impervious to the outside world. For a while, he is happy simply being, knowing the extent of his own universe, exploring every inch of its space that he can. But towards the end of the dream, his walls begin to fade. They grow thinner, as if they were dissolving away, and he can start to see the sunlight outside. He pushes towards it, the eggshell begins to crack…

    And that’s when the dreams end.

    Human Biography:

    Spoiler

    Felix was born into money, and if he hadn’t become a Pokémon, probably would have died with money even if he’d made more than a couple unsound investments. His mother had never worked either, she had inherited their money as well, and on and on up the family tree until it gets lost in the fog of time. His father was the son of some shopkeeper who’d worked and saved his way into the wealthy elite,

    Needless to say, Felix never worked a day in his life. That’s not to say he was idle or lazy as a child, but he was still a little spoiled. The idea that he could, say, order something off of a menu without looking at the price was something he enjoyed. But he was still curious about the world around him, and would spend weeks at a time delving into some obsession before discarding it and moving on to the next thing to hold his interest.

    He was just coming of age when he was transformed into a Pokémon. He still hadn’t found a singular thing to focus his studies on, though his most recent interest had been archaeology. So maybe he would have been that when he grew up. Maybe he would have found something else.

    But that doesn’t matter now, now does it?

    Core Memory: On Top of the World

    MovesTackle, Quick Attack, Wing Attack, Double Team

    Z-MoveSkyward Skystrike

    Ability: Keen Eye

    Miscellaneous: Some say he's a decent enough singer, or they would if he'd ever let them listen. But on the nights when his bad dreams get the better of him, one might be able to hear a soft little hum amidst the nighttime ambiance.

     


  6. Church-Going Girl

    Spoiler

    yOaBz5p.jpg

    The LORD knows my prayers. He is in my heart. He is in my soul.

    Name: Melissa Thomas Ashforth
    Gender: Female
    Age: 16
    Physical Description:

    Spoiler

    nkdrABY.jpg

    Melissa stands on the shorter end of five feet and four inches and weighs about 110 pounds. Depicted above is something akin to her formalwear, her “Sunday Best” as some might call it. Despite its cartoonish, costume-esque appearance, it’s what she is most comfortable in during times of worship or prayer. Her normal clothing is similarly formal, or at the very least conservative. Ankle-high dresses are practically all she wears if she can get away with it, and her posture is similarly as straight up-and-down as this sort of attire requires. 

    Melissa generally prefers her hair shorter than the above picture, generally keeping it just below the shoulder. She seldom removes her crucifix necklace and is incredibly uncomfortable when not wearing it. She doesn’t tend to use any other accessories outside of her duel disk which is a standard model, given character only by the signs of wear it has endured.

    Personality:

    Spoiler

    It’s not that I don’t have anything to say. It’s just that I’d really rather not say it.

    Melissa finds a lot of spiritual comfort in Catholicism, though she doesn’t really like to talk about it. Melissa doesn’t like to talk about a lot of things, actually. Outside of scripture readings and the standard “Peace be with you” (“And with your spirit”), Melissa’s voice slowly decreases in decibel level until it is barely a mumble.

    Interacting with Melissa, therefore, is a series of ordeals, each three or four sentences long. It’s not that she tries to push people away, it’s just that, well, wouldn’t it be better if she was left alone? Just for a little bit? She’s better with people she’s gotten to know, sometimes holding her own in lengthy, meaningless, conversations that friends tend to have with each other, but it’s definitely the “getting to know you” stage that she suffers at. It should be noted that a lot of this comes from the mere idea of face-to-face interaction. When online or through SMS (even with the recipient still in talking range), many of these inhibitions fade away and she’s almost a normal person.

    Sometimes, whether because of some external influence (“You should get out more!”) or a sincere attempt to better herself, Melissa will try to push past these mental barriers she’s set up for herself. It’s in these instances -- instances that last for maybe a week at most -- where Melissa meets new people. It’s never great -- meeting new people never is for her -- but these people are added to the people she is slightly more comfortable talking with, and for Melissa, that’s enough.

    All this also translates over to Melissa’s dueling style. In a general sense, dueling is still interacting with another person; it’s still an interaction she’d like to get over with, so she duels as efficiently as possible, though perhaps at the expense of skill. She’s prone to mistakes, sometimes missing an on-board trick or not properly playing around a trap. When she does take her time, she’s amazing, but these are flashes of brilliance lost in a fog of mediocrity.

    Biography:

    Spoiler

    I have never heard The LORD speak myself, and I don’t pretend to know what He would say. I can only hope that He would approve.

    It’s not that her parents were particularly religious, it’s not that one of them had died and Melissa had turned to spirituality for answers, and it certainly wasn’t aggressive recruiting by some fringe group, but for as long as Melissa could remember, she’d been an active member of some church or another. Her parents don’t really attend -- they’re more of a “Christmas and Easter” sort of family -- but they know it makes her happy.

    Church and school take up the two largest chunks of Melissa’s life. In fact, Melissa learned how to duel during an after-church youth group session. The leaders, a couple named Nick and Katie, were very interested in keeping violent conflict to a minimum, and introducing their students to the dome’s most popular game was as good a solution as any. It was in this environment that Melissa was introduced to the Darklords.

    Darklord Nasten’s struggle for repentance resonated with Melissa, who herself constantly deals with her own crises of faith. Most of them, broadly, concern her own desire for perfection contrasted with how fallible she knows she can be. During especially bad periods she can spend more time in or near a confession booth than outside of a one.

    Melissa dreams of joining a convent -- it doesn’t particularly matter which one -- taking a vow of silence, and disappearing into the halls of her nunnery without a word. But there’s also a small part of her, a part that she’d really rather ignore thank you very much, that wonders if that’s particularly healthy of her, and maybe, just maybe…

    Well, there’s a reason she doesn’t like to think about it.

    Dueling Information:

    Spoiler

    Deck: Darklords/Archlords. These cards tell the stories of fallen angels, which mechanically translates to large angel-shaped fairies moving quickly from hand or deck to graveyard to play. When Melissa is feeling particularly motivated (or, to be a bit more specific, feels as if she has little other choice), her Duel Skill allows her to redeem these angels once more, transforming them into their Archlord variants. The strategy remains the same, just with slightly more powerful effects.

    Ace Card: The "Boss Monster" of the Darklords is Darklord Morningstar, though Melissa prefers Darklord Nasten for reasons mentioned in her "Biography" section.

    Custom Cards: Archlords

    Duel Skill: Last Sacrament: If your LP are 4000 or less, during your Main Phase: You can banish any number of "Darklord" cards from your hand, Deck and/or GY, and if you do, replace each of them with 1 "Archlord" card from your Side Deck with an identical word in its name to the card banished.

    Miscellaneous:

    • Melissa’s favorite Old Testament book is the Book of Job, her favorite New Testament book is the Act of the Apostles, and her favorite Psalm is Psalm 32.
    • George Fredric Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus was her favorite song when she was younger, and though she's branched out since then, she still finds herself preferring at least religion-adjacent music.
    • Short Story: Our First Reading

     

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