"Moral justification is a powerful disengagement mechanism. Destructive conduct is made personally and socially acceptable by portraying it in the service of moral ends." - Albert Bandura
"Ultimately, if people lose their willingness to recognize that there are times in our history when legality becomes distinct from morality, we aren't just ceding control of our rights to government, but our futures." - Edward Snowden
"Ultimately, if people lose their willingness to recognize that there are times in our history when legality becomes distinct from morality, we aren't just ceding control of our rights to government, but our futures." - Edward Snowden
Fairy Tail has no depth at all, but I wouldn't say it's more childish than Naruto. In Naruto the bad guys all have some sort of weird ideal and Naruto is the one who has to change them. Like the fight with pain where pain destroys the whole city and kills everyone but then Naruto talks to him about something like fear, hate and pain (which then leads to the dark side.. haha) and whatnot and then Pain is so moved by naruto that becomes his friend and sacrifices himself to revive everyone.. WTF? Honestly, how childish is that?
I'm easily Impressed by Manga/Anime, so I don't really prefer childish over mature or vice versa. If I like it, I watch it. I originally passed up on SAO, but I'm going to have to give it a look. I've easily watched 100+ anime (probably a lot more, but I haven't been keeping track so I'll go with 100+).
Thanks to DuskToGlory for the sigs. LOL :)
Working on a Pantheon guide, will finish when I get around to it, could be never.
+Rep? I ran out of witty remarks about this, just do it, or not.
Canoas wrote:
In Naruto the bad guys all have some sort of weird ideal and Naruto is the one who has to change them. Like the fight with pain where pain destroys the whole city and kills everyone but then Naruto talks to him about something like fear, hate and pain (which then leads to the dark side.. haha) and whatnot and then Pain is so moved by naruto that becomes his friend and sacrifices himself to revive everyone.. WTF? Honestly, how childish is that?
Hmm, yea. I guess it is kinda childish. What I meant by that comment was that I thought it was somewhere in between childish and mature, but alas; I don't spend that much time thinking about Naruto.
Google has a job title called "Head of Black Community Engagement"..
I don't know whether to cry or laugh.. or both.
I don't know whether to cry or laugh.. or both.
I'd say naruto is one of those examples where they tried to add depth but failed. This last boss, Tobi, wants to hypnotise everyone so wars will stop.. Like a cheap copy of Code Ge***.
Btw, do you watch Game of Thrones? FMA's north walL, Briggs, is pretty much the same as GoT's north wall, Black. FMA surely got that idea from A Song of Ice and Fire
Btw, do you watch Game of Thrones? FMA's north walL, Briggs, is pretty much the same as GoT's north wall, Black. FMA surely got that idea from A Song of Ice and Fire
Wintermond wrote:
Kokoro Connect. good stuff.
El Psy Congroo.
|You can't spell slaughter without laughter.|
You need to log in before commenting.
I like childish stories. I mean, as long as the battles are cool. I prefer the standard "We have to kill the bad guy" stories like naruto or DBZ than those mangas/animes that try to add more depth but just ends up really weird or stop making sense in some parts.
Dislike may be a little much, but I generally enjoy childish stories less than mature ones.
I dislike nonsensical stories as much as the next guy, but the mature stories that do make sense and have interesting content are the ones that I adore.
Also; I don't consider Naruto as especially childish. It kinda starts out that way, but that's mostly because Naruto is young and childish himself.
Fairy Tail would be a prime example of a childish story.