We don't even know if she's immortal, but even then, it seems like a lot of stuff about Finn is "fated". In basically every incarnation where it's possible he
- Loses an arm
- Has a Jake
- Ends with Huntress Wizard
I mean, it happened three times across three different dimensions. Seems to me like they might just be fated to end together like Finn and Jake are fated to be bros.
Personally, I prefer the idea that Huntress becomes a big tree deep in an ancient forest that serves as Finn's "mausoleum", because that sounds like a grave worthy of a hero.
Few characters are immortal in this universe, not faltering to Time is not true immortality. Golb was dissolved and reformed into Betty. Does that not mean Golb "died," via the theory of Theseus's Boat?
Secondly, the Lich succeeded. He killed ALL life in his universe. No one survived. No immortals.
True, but a lot of big player female characters in this series are immortal, can't really blame them for assuming she either has long life or immortality.
Took her forever to realize that she had no memories of being Magic Ooo Fionna, meaning the person she currently was would die so that another similar but very different Fionna would get to live a life of magical adventure.
>Finn becomes the new Billy >these two guys (Shermy and Beth?) are trying to find Finn to help deal with ... I can never remember his name, Dinklehoff, or whatever >encounter previous characters, like Marceline and Princess Bubblegum >Marceline is a cosmopolitan who is traveling the world, they run into her by chance while running from Dinklehoff >Princess Bubblegum leaves her Gumball guardian out of impulse, encounters our new heroes and tells them Finn's last known whereabouts >at this point just make it an adventure involving more previous characters >finale is HW guarding Finn's grave, and giving them the knowledge to defeat Dinklehoff, or whatever
I'm no writer but I bet this would make some people happy.
>finale is HW guarding Finn's grave
Now all that's left is giving her a faux latin name and she'll be a souls boss, complete with an person to talk about in the ominous death dialogue.
(part 1)
My pitch for the series would be >Serialized five season storyline compared to how Adventure Time was mostly episodic >Would be the antidiote to the main issue of the AT spinoffs being hard to get into for new audiences, because the original had so many episodes, by being viewable as a standalone narrative despite some characters returning >The main premise is kind of like an apocalyptic Avatar where Shermy and Beth have to assemble the five elements of the current era (although two of them are returning characters) and use their powers to overthrow Gibbon's tyrannical reign over Ooo >Story is kicked off by Marceline (whose way more mellowed out, slightly more mature and not as much of a punk rocker anymore) finding Shermy and Beth squatting in her house and she tricks them into going on a quest to find PB as payment for rent
My pitch for the series (part 2) >Season one is about searching for PB, whose in an interesting headspace now that she's outlived her kingdom and is kind of at her lowest point, with Gunter/Ice Thing as the main villain of the first season >PB and Marceline are a melancholic old couple since they've both outlived their friends hundreds of years over together >Rest of the three seasons are about searching for the elements and helping them build up their power while Gibbon and his empire are the overarching villains with the final season where they finally beat him >Patience St. Pim is the unreliable shady elemental but she comes around eventually >Subplot where Shermy's Finn sword from the treehouse is hinted to be intelligent until a reveal around season three that Finn is actually still in there, gets his own arc where he mentors Shermy and deals with being a copy of the original Finn in a long distant and dystopian era of Ooo, which culminates in him revealing himself to everyone and tricking Gibbon and his empire to buy the protagonists time to escape like Luke in TLJ >Gibbon is a tragic antagonist, basically Ice King if he was completely evil, since he was Jake's grandson and would have known the original cast in the original era but he still goes out without getting a redemption
I like to think not, only because it is another situation where he was completely dissolved and reformed as something "new." Who really knows, but it was neat to see "death die," in a sense.
I don't know. I guess answers to the few things we know about the world of 1000+
When most of the characters you grew to love are all dead it's a little sad. I like Shermy and Beth though. And Bubblegum and Marcy are still out there somewhere.
Frankly, I wouldn't want to see anything of the sort. The setting, characters, atmosphere, everything about 1000+ is way more melancholic than it is intriguing, not the kind of thing that hooked me into Adventure Time initially and just kinda sours me on it anytime it's shown.
Maybe if it ended on the fated "crunch/reset of the universe" that some extra material about the Enchiridion hinted at, I might see it through, if only because this story's been fricked for years.
sorry to bother y'all but there's a specific episode of adventure time wherein Finn goes into this like autotuned smooth shape world and the aesthetic has been stuck in my head for years and I've been researching but I can't find the episode. I don't have a credit card so the whole series is hard to watch in Canada. One day I will watch the whole thing again but
Honestly, there's three things of obvious interest in future Ooo going on >It feels more dreary and there's a lack of obvious magic stuff going on despite the pups all being magical, there's ruins dating back to the old world mostly untouched ect >Beth and Shermy are considered to be criminals and revolutionaries by the main villain, who has a tight control over everything >Sweet P is alive and huge
I'd have the story be about them traveling the world to fix/overthrow the Pup Kingdom, which could have a tight hold on Ooo but not the rest of the world, which has improved somewhat over the last 1000+ due to humans and other creatures from Ooo (possibly aliens too, why not) colonizing it, resulting in a place that's gone through several different waves of growth and renewal. Gibbon would be the closest to a standard sword-and-sorcery villain, in the sense that he'd be the obvious final boss from the start, and Beth and Shermy, lacking a real equivalent of the Treehouse, would have every incentive to be on the move and constantly be on the lookout to pursue leads that could allow them to beat up Gibbon.
>Beth and Shermy, lacking a real equivalent of the Treehouse, would have every incentive to be on the move and constantly be on the lookout to pursue leads that could allow them to beat up Gibbon.
Ironically Finn and Jake were originally intended to be traveling nomads but CN didn't allow that because they didn't want the protagonists to be homeless
Perfectly reasonable and probably a good move at the end of the day because it gave Finn and Jake a place to stash their loot+treehouses are the sort of thing young kids like.
Wait a minute... If the Winter King was just as crazy, delusional and forgetful as regular Ice King, how did he know to transfer the curse onto someone else?
the end
I'd rather see Finn and Huntress wizard
This but the monkey's paw is that it's a tragic love story because of HW's immortality
We don't even know if she's immortal, but even then, it seems like a lot of stuff about Finn is "fated". In basically every incarnation where it's possible he
- Loses an arm
- Has a Jake
- Ends with Huntress Wizard
I mean, it happened three times across three different dimensions. Seems to me like they might just be fated to end together like Finn and Jake are fated to be bros.
Personally, I prefer the idea that Huntress becomes a big tree deep in an ancient forest that serves as Finn's "mausoleum", because that sounds like a grave worthy of a hero.
Few characters are immortal in this universe, not faltering to Time is not true immortality. Golb was dissolved and reformed into Betty. Does that not mean Golb "died," via the theory of Theseus's Boat?
Secondly, the Lich succeeded. He killed ALL life in his universe. No one survived. No immortals.
Except we literally have no evidence HW is immortal. People just assumed that.
True, but a lot of big player female characters in this series are immortal, can't really blame them for assuming she either has long life or immortality.
>Loses an arm
Since Fionna lives a relatively normal life now, will she lose hers in a random freak accident?
Probably, her universe was canonized so she IS her own Finn.
Took her forever to realize that she had no memories of being Magic Ooo Fionna, meaning the person she currently was would die so that another similar but very different Fionna would get to live a life of magical adventure.
weed wacker accident
>I'm a weed whacker.
>will she lose hers in a random freak accident?
a freak masturbation accident
>Finn becomes the new Billy
>these two guys (Shermy and Beth?) are trying to find Finn to help deal with ... I can never remember his name, Dinklehoff, or whatever
>encounter previous characters, like Marceline and Princess Bubblegum
>Marceline is a cosmopolitan who is traveling the world, they run into her by chance while running from Dinklehoff
>Princess Bubblegum leaves her Gumball guardian out of impulse, encounters our new heroes and tells them Finn's last known whereabouts
>at this point just make it an adventure involving more previous characters
>finale is HW guarding Finn's grave, and giving them the knowledge to defeat Dinklehoff, or whatever
I'm no writer but I bet this would make some people happy.
>finale is HW guarding Finn's grave
Now all that's left is giving her a faux latin name and she'll be a souls boss, complete with an person to talk about in the ominous death dialogue.
(part 1)
My pitch for the series would be
>Serialized five season storyline compared to how Adventure Time was mostly episodic
>Would be the antidiote to the main issue of the AT spinoffs being hard to get into for new audiences, because the original had so many episodes, by being viewable as a standalone narrative despite some characters returning
>The main premise is kind of like an apocalyptic Avatar where Shermy and Beth have to assemble the five elements of the current era (although two of them are returning characters) and use their powers to overthrow Gibbon's tyrannical reign over Ooo
>Story is kicked off by Marceline (whose way more mellowed out, slightly more mature and not as much of a punk rocker anymore) finding Shermy and Beth squatting in her house and she tricks them into going on a quest to find PB as payment for rent
>picrel says "1000 year latter"
Cooler that way
My pitch for the series (part 2)
>Season one is about searching for PB, whose in an interesting headspace now that she's outlived her kingdom and is kind of at her lowest point, with Gunter/Ice Thing as the main villain of the first season
>PB and Marceline are a melancholic old couple since they've both outlived their friends hundreds of years over together
>Rest of the three seasons are about searching for the elements and helping them build up their power while Gibbon and his empire are the overarching villains with the final season where they finally beat him
>Patience St. Pim is the unreliable shady elemental but she comes around eventually
>Subplot where Shermy's Finn sword from the treehouse is hinted to be intelligent until a reveal around season three that Finn is actually still in there, gets his own arc where he mentors Shermy and deals with being a copy of the original Finn in a long distant and dystopian era of Ooo, which culminates in him revealing himself to everyone and tricking Gibbon and his empire to buy the protagonists time to escape like Luke in TLJ
>Gibbon is a tragic antagonist, basically Ice King if he was completely evil, since he was Jake's grandson and would have known the original cast in the original era but he still goes out without getting a redemption
So what happens when human-Lich dies?
He just dies. This is another great point that few characters are actually immortal. The Lich was literally forcibly given life.
So he doesn't just become the Lich again?
I like to think not, only because it is another situation where he was completely dissolved and reformed as something "new." Who really knows, but it was neat to see "death die," in a sense.
True and with Finn throwing a sperm-like substance at him at that
Why are you like this? Desperately all alone? I'd rather not keep company with misery.
What? It's literally what happened and I didn't mean to be miserable or anything like that lmao
I don't know. I guess answers to the few things we know about the world of 1000+
When most of the characters you grew to love are all dead it's a little sad. I like Shermy and Beth though. And Bubblegum and Marcy are still out there somewhere.
Out there grinding their veganas together
For 1000+ years
Talk about mastering an art.
No, the designs are ugly.
Nothing, let it rest for good
The series is still going.
Adventure Time has become one of those franchises where it could be about literally any character in any setting in any genre
And that's a good thing
this is why it actually should go on forever. The Simpsons is a zombie because no matter what it still has to be about the Simpsons
>Simpsons
>the Simp Sons
It was destined to fail
>Sneed's
>Formely Chuck's
It was destined to meme
I'd like to see more of the main cast before moving on to the far future
That pic is a real mood.
Man, Finn has alot of scars...
Most of those are actually from Finn himself after Jake died
what happened to the other characters?
Frankly, I wouldn't want to see anything of the sort. The setting, characters, atmosphere, everything about 1000+ is way more melancholic than it is intriguing, not the kind of thing that hooked me into Adventure Time initially and just kinda sours me on it anytime it's shown.
Maybe if it ended on the fated "crunch/reset of the universe" that some extra material about the Enchiridion hinted at, I might see it through, if only because this story's been fricked for years.
sorry to bother y'all but there's a specific episode of adventure time wherein Finn goes into this like autotuned smooth shape world and the aesthetic has been stuck in my head for years and I've been researching but I can't find the episode. I don't have a credit card so the whole series is hard to watch in Canada. One day I will watch the whole thing again but
Does anyone know what episode I'm talking about?
Most likely one of the guest-animated episodes: https://adventuretime.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Guest-Animated_Episodes
Puhoy? Grotto?
Something about those are really weird.
Rattleballs society
Is Minerva still around?
It's implied humans might be extinct for real this time so probably not
They're either in space, fully cyborg'd or they've contributed to the genetics of the Pups.
Or eaten by the pups since they're half rainicorn
They could technically still have Finn with Baby Finn. Actually, I wanna a Baby Finn growing with P-bot
I want Bubblegum to die.
Why?
wtf that's my mom 🙁
chill out lady man.
Was PB a better Grandma than she was a mother?
Um... Anon. I have no idea how to talk to you about this?
Was Simon a good dad?
Yeah he was pretty good, given the circumstances.
Honestly, there's three things of obvious interest in future Ooo going on
>It feels more dreary and there's a lack of obvious magic stuff going on despite the pups all being magical, there's ruins dating back to the old world mostly untouched ect
>Beth and Shermy are considered to be criminals and revolutionaries by the main villain, who has a tight control over everything
>Sweet P is alive and huge
I'd have the story be about them traveling the world to fix/overthrow the Pup Kingdom, which could have a tight hold on Ooo but not the rest of the world, which has improved somewhat over the last 1000+ due to humans and other creatures from Ooo (possibly aliens too, why not) colonizing it, resulting in a place that's gone through several different waves of growth and renewal. Gibbon would be the closest to a standard sword-and-sorcery villain, in the sense that he'd be the obvious final boss from the start, and Beth and Shermy, lacking a real equivalent of the Treehouse, would have every incentive to be on the move and constantly be on the lookout to pursue leads that could allow them to beat up Gibbon.
>Beth and Shermy, lacking a real equivalent of the Treehouse, would have every incentive to be on the move and constantly be on the lookout to pursue leads that could allow them to beat up Gibbon.
Ironically Finn and Jake were originally intended to be traveling nomads but CN didn't allow that because they didn't want the protagonists to be homeless
Perfectly reasonable and probably a good move at the end of the day because it gave Finn and Jake a place to stash their loot+treehouses are the sort of thing young kids like.
Aren't these 2 just sillies?
Would her pussy be full of leaves?
What would happen if Ice Thing went to space?
Finn's prefect wife by the way.
I want more Susan Strengh
You want more Susan Strengh
>GET HIS EYES! CUT HIM IN THE EYES!
We never get to see more of them.
Nothing
Wait a minute... If the Winter King was just as crazy, delusional and forgetful as regular Ice King, how did he know to transfer the curse onto someone else?