Jerry is a mouse, a vermin that spreads diseases and steal food, Tom is the hero because he exterminate (Or at least he tries to) the plagues that causes harm to people.
Jerry is the invader, he could have moved out at any point, it's not like he has done anything to earn his residency in the house either. Mammy has job and so does Tom, Jerry is a piece of shit
Jerry is a mouse. An uninvited freeloader, a food thief, disease-ridden vermin, a plague that looks for himself. But at the same time, he is shown to be friendly, courageous, intelligent and defiant of the powers that be. For the little man, he represents rebellion against the system, fighting for one's right to live, he's anarchy and freedom, liberation.
Tom is a house cat, put there by humans to get rid of jerry. He represents the man assimilated by a bigger system, where he is not that much different from jerry on paper, but he is in a position of power over the little man bestowed by an even bigger, more abstract power (the human owner). He shows positive qualities like duty and loyalty and even a conscience depending on the episode, but at the same time, he has been shown to be petty, lazy and cruel. Also, as a cat, is a pest himself.
Tom and jerry are complex, morally grey, characters that are neither completely good/heroic nor completely evil/villainous. They both have their own strengths and weaknesses, they have values in common, and even work together if the circumstances call for it. They're essentially two sides of the same coin, forced against one another by circumstances of life and fate. Whether you consider tom or jerry the hero of the story says more about your world view than it says about them.
heck, I think he is even wrong on a basic level. Yes, an antagonist to the protagonist is an EASY way to write a hero story, but there are ways to do it in different ways.
For example, a meteor(or any kind of end-of-the-world natural disaster) or just regular criminals. Having to deal with this kind of stuff already can show you a heroes journey(which you don't even need, not every story about a hero needs to be about this trop device), without having a gay romance with a psychopath.
I disagree, villains help a lot but they are not essential, you can write stories about the hero just helping some random person without a villain at all. A good villain is important to make the story more popular just like a love interest, mentor figure or sidekick but not essential to write a good story.
Stop spamming your shitty threads,shroommeister
>Kojima
Wrong board
Kojima is the Christopher Nolan of video games and I mean that in both the best and worst possible ways
.... Anon I see where you're coming from. I sort of agree, mostly disagree. But I respect the hell out of the self analysis of that opinion.
Yes. Kojima is never wrong.
didn't he kill shinzo abe?
Hideo is usually more level headed and pragmatic. Kojima gets to fixated on the wrong details and is right by accident.
>Snake and Liquid
>Sam and Higgs
the nerves of this dude
But why did he kill Shinzo Abe?
I choose not to question the Quickening.
Hideo and Kojima
Kojima and Abe
... wait is Tom the hero or is Jerry?
Tom is the hero
But Jerry just wants to live.
Jerry is a mouse, a vermin that spreads diseases and steal food, Tom is the hero because he exterminate (Or at least he tries to) the plagues that causes harm to people.
Jerry is the invader, he could have moved out at any point, it's not like he has done anything to earn his residency in the house either. Mammy has job and so does Tom, Jerry is a piece of shit
Jerry is a home invading thief piece of shit. Tom is defending his home and family
Jerry is a mouse. An uninvited freeloader, a food thief, disease-ridden vermin, a plague that looks for himself. But at the same time, he is shown to be friendly, courageous, intelligent and defiant of the powers that be. For the little man, he represents rebellion against the system, fighting for one's right to live, he's anarchy and freedom, liberation.
Tom is a house cat, put there by humans to get rid of jerry. He represents the man assimilated by a bigger system, where he is not that much different from jerry on paper, but he is in a position of power over the little man bestowed by an even bigger, more abstract power (the human owner). He shows positive qualities like duty and loyalty and even a conscience depending on the episode, but at the same time, he has been shown to be petty, lazy and cruel. Also, as a cat, is a pest himself.
Tom and jerry are complex, morally grey, characters that are neither completely good/heroic nor completely evil/villainous. They both have their own strengths and weaknesses, they have values in common, and even work together if the circumstances call for it. They're essentially two sides of the same coin, forced against one another by circumstances of life and fate. Whether you consider tom or jerry the hero of the story says more about your world view than it says about them.
yes
He's right. You think you would have got 60 years of spider-man comics if he just stopped no name bank robbers each issue?
Idk but was that why he shot the exPM?
>Protagonist needs antagonist.
Whoa.
He's basically saying that the best hero and villain pairs should be gay for each other.
But Solid and Liquid are twin brothers
heck, I think he is even wrong on a basic level. Yes, an antagonist to the protagonist is an EASY way to write a hero story, but there are ways to do it in different ways.
For example, a meteor(or any kind of end-of-the-world natural disaster) or just regular criminals. Having to deal with this kind of stuff already can show you a heroes journey(which you don't even need, not every story about a hero needs to be about this trop device), without having a gay romance with a psychopath.
>my characters are as amazing as other popular characters people have actually heard of
Eh? You'd have a point if he was just fluffing himself over Death Stranding but everyone knows Solid and Liquid Snake.
Was Hideo Kojima right about this?
hypnotizing
La Creatividad es muy loco
Isn’t that a pretty common message?
Yes
truly a god
I disagree, villains help a lot but they are not essential, you can write stories about the hero just helping some random person without a villain at all. A good villain is important to make the story more popular just like a love interest, mentor figure or sidekick but not essential to write a good story.