[ EPU Foyer ] [ Lab and Grill ] [ Bonus Theater!! ] [ Rhetorical Questions ] [ CSRANTronix ] [ GNDN ] [ Subterranean Vault ] [ Discussion Forum ] [ Gun of the Week ]

Eyrie Productions, Unlimited

Subject: "(OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory"     Previous Topic | Next Topic
Printer-friendly copy    
Conferences Annotations (Spoiler Warning!) Topic #153
Reading Topic #153
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
21972 posts
Jun-23-22, 06:10 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
"(OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory"
 
   LAST EDITED ON Sep-28-22 AT 04:47 PM (EDT)
 
[Huh, this has been misnumbered the whole time and nobody noticed, including me. Oops! --G.]

Red Castle Burgers & Fries - "Red Castle" is the English translation of Akagi (赤城), the name of a stratovolcano in Japan's Gunma Prefecture. In the early 1920s the second of the planned Amagi-class battlecruisers was named after Mount Akagi, in accordance with the IJN's naming convention of the time; when the Amagi class was subsequently outlawed by the 1922 Naval Limitation Treaty, the partially completed hull of Akagi was converted into an aircraft carrier. Nearly 500 years later, the spirit of that aircraft carrier, embodied in Valhalla, founded a small chain of hamburger shops. And so, here we are.

In terms of its presentation and décor, Red Castle owes more to Five Guys than White Castle, with overtones of other diner-style burger chains such as Johnny Rockets. In keeping with Akagi's personal style, it is known for its ample portions, even for diners with more normal appetites than an early-twentieth-century aircraft carrier. The French fries are also widely held to be the finest available in Valhalla.

Red Castle proudly serves Chock Full o' Baux coffee, which is available in a version containing no aluminum for patrons to whom it is toxic (or just unappealing).

unidentifiable but appetizing soft drink - Kaga has never encountered Pepsi Max before.

kanmusu who were sunk in battle or scrapped - The phenomenon is not exclusive to kanmusu, of course; most Einherjar have similar dreams, off and on.

Fubuki's journal entry - Originally published in 2018 as the Forum Mini-Story "The Dying-Dream".

a bottle of tarhun - Also known as tarkhuna, a carbonated soft drink that originated in Georgia (the country in the Caucasus, not the American state) in the 1880s. The Soviet government began to promote it throughout the USSR in the early 1980s, and it remains popular in Russia and other former Soviet member-states today. It's bright green and tastes like tarragon.

light cruiser Yūbari - The real-life cruiser Yūbari was an experimental ship constructed in the early 1920s as a testbed for various advanced shipbuilding and propulsion technologies. She was never duplicated, but the techniques pioneered in her development influenced Japanese shipbuilding thereafter. Probably for this reason, the producers of the Kantai Collection TV anime depicted her as the Naval Base's chief mechanic in place of Akashi. I think Akashi was still just the game's unnamed "item shop girl" NPC when the anime was made, and hadn't been implemented as a repair ship.

Saint Isambard help me - Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806–1859) was an English civil and mechanical engineer and naval architect who pioneered the construction of really large all-metal steamships. As such, he is something of a hero to many kanmusu, particularly from the English-speaking world (although not an actual saint).

HMS Vindictive - If Vindictive strikes you as an odd name for an unarmed repair ship, it may help to know that she was converted from an aircraft carrier.

a scruffy, lovable mutt called Victory - Victory, or Vicky as he was familiarly known, was a real dog who belonged to USS Iowa's first commanding officer, Captain John L. McCrea. He served aboard the battleship for the entirety of her first commission, from 1943 to 1949, rising to the rank of Mascot First Class (although he was once busted back to Mascot Third Class for going AWOL and fighting). In the course of his naval career, he transited the Panama Canal and crossed both the Equator and the Prime Meridian, with appropriate ceremonies. The Battleship USS Iowa Museum has more information about Victory on its website.

USCGC Acushnet - The fifth of the U.S. Navy's 19 Diver-class salvage and rescue ships, originally named USS Shackle (ARS-9), Acushnet was transferred to the Coast Guard and renamed after the town of Acushnet, Massachusetts, in 1946. For the next 22 years, she was homeported in Portland, Maine, then served stints in the Caribbean, the West Coast, and finally Alaska, concluding her service in 2011—not a bad career for a 213-foot seagoing tug constructed in a hurry during World War II. Along the way she was redesignated several times; her final hull number, WMEC-167, denotes her as a Medium Endurance Cutter, a designation usually reserved for somewhat larger ships. WMECs are defined as cutters with accommodations suitable for the crew to live aboard, capable of patrols lasting six to eight weeks.

Over the course of her long career(s), Shackle/Acushnet cleared wreckage in Pearl Harbor and at Midway; performed rescues and field repairs on Allied warships damaged by kamikaze attacks; cleared mines off Japan; participated in the International Ice Patrol out of Portland; rescued sailors from the tanker SS Fort Mercer during the great Cape Cod winter storm of 1952 (another Coast Guard rescue of another tanker sunk by the same storm, SS Pendleton, is recounted in the book and film The Finest Hours); spent a few years as an oceanographic research ship; received the Coast Guard's Humanitarian Service Award for her work during the 1980 Mariel Boatlift from Cuba; and finished out her career patrolling the Bering Sea out of Ketchikan, Alaska. She has seen some shit, is what I'm getting at.

it took half the United States Navy to bring me down - Musashi is exaggerating, but she did require an awful lot of sinking. It took dozens of aircraft from three separate carriers a whole day to do the job, by which time it's estimated that she'd taken 19 torpedoes and at least 17 direct hits from bombs. She finally capsized and sank hours after the battle, when efforts to control flooding failed and her engines stopped before she could be beached.

a Cumbrian accent - As a product of Vickers-Armstrongs of Barrow-in-Furness, England, Kongō has never quite shed the dialect of her birthplace (which was technically in Lancashire in 1912, but still). Here in UF, her spoken English is mostly Home Counties/RP, but the North slips through now and then, particularly when she's excited (which is a lot of the time).

I go by Goya, dechi - "Dechi" is Goya's verbal tic (a relatively common feature in Kancolle character designs). Like most Japanese subs' nicknames in Kancolle, hers is derived from one way of pronouncing the digits in her name ("go" = 5, "ya" = 8).

Balao class... there's a lot of us - 120 Balao-class submarines were completed, which, combined with the 77 members of the preceding (and very similar) Gato class and the 29 boats of the succeeding Tench class, adds up to quite a big family for the submarines of that design lineage.

Amazingly, one Balao-class sub is still in operational service as of this writing: ROCS Hai Pao (SS-792), formerly USS Tusk (SS-426), which is one of two WWII-vintage submarines still operated by the Republic of China Navy (the other is the Tench-class Hai Shih, ex-USS Cutlass). A further eight Balao-class subs are preserved as museum ships, including USS Lionfish and USS Bowfin, both mentioned in previous RCFR episodes. You may have seen USS Pampanito starring as USS Stingray in the 1996 motion picture Down Periscope.

the full UDT rig - "UDT" stands for "Underwater Demolition Team", the World War II US Navy's highly specialized force of scuba divers trained in advanced dive techniques, search-and-rescue, reconnaissance, combat swimming, explosives disposal, and sabotage. UDT eventually picked up even more of an emphasis on the commando end of things and evolved into the Navy SEAL program. Tang is referring to the uniform the un-remodeled form of U-511, the Kancolle U-boat character who turns into Ro-500 when remodeled, wears, which is a full-body tactical wetsuit as opposed to the more customary Japanese school swimsuit.

United States Navy fleet collier - Colliers were a type of ship designed to transport large quantities of coal and supply them to other ships in their fleets, back in the days when warships burned it for fuel. Having colliers along extended the range at which groups of ships could operate without needing to return to port to resupply. Vestal was commissioned in 1909, only a few years before the US Navy converted most of its ships to burn oil instead. The conversion left the fleet's colliers out of a job (evidently they weren't good candidates for conversion to fleet oilers, which took their place), but some of the newer hulls, like Vestal, were refitted for other types of support operations. Vestal was taken out of service as a collier in 1912 and relaunched the following year as one of the first dedicated repair ships.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top

  Subject     Author     Message Date     ID  
  RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory The Traitor Jun-24-22 1
     RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory Gryphonadmin Jun-24-22 2
         RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory The Traitor Jun-24-22 3
             RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory Peter Eng Jun-26-22 5
             RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory Senji Jul-01-22 6
         RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory CdrMike Jun-26-22 4
  RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory MoonEyes Sep-28-22 7
     RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory Gryphonadmin Sep-28-22 8
         RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory MoonEyes Sep-28-22 9
  RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory KtarraMoon May-31-23 10
     RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory Peter Eng May-31-23 11
         RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory Gryphonadmin Jul-30-23 12

Conferences | Topics | Previous Topic | Next Topic
The Traitor
Member since Feb-24-09
1184 posts
Jun-24-22, 07:33 AM (EDT)
Click to EMail The%20Traitor Click to send private message to The%20Traitor Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
1. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #0
 
   Question, since I know diddly-dick about the KanColle and AoBS canons: are there any plans to include the more esoteric ships and attendant shipgirls in Eyrie? I'm thinking along the lines of the Minas Geraes and/or Sao Paulo as grande dame elder stateswomen of the Allied contingent (even though they were a bit obsolete by WW2), or the Dutch submarines who were (under the evocatively named Admiral "Ship-A-Day" Helfrich) responsible for inflicting serious damage on the IJN despite reaching levels of outnumbered normally reserved for targets of the Bolivian Army. I think the latter could make for some interesting characters. It'd be nice to see someone the other submarine girls view as actual honest-to-Njord berserkers, especially when the POV character is expectng them to be, shall we say, considerably more chill given their nation of origin.

---
"She's old, she's lame, she's barren too, // "She's not worth feed or hay, // "But I'll give her this," - he blew smoke at me - // "She was something in her day." -- Garnet Rogers, Small Victory

FiMFiction.net: we might accept blatant porn involving the cast of My Little Pony but as God is my witness we have standards.

ijn: we will take over indonesia for the glory of the japanese empire!
dutch colonial navy consisting of like twelve boats and a kipper called fred:


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
21972 posts
Jun-24-22, 02:12 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
2. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #1
 
   >Question, since I know diddly-dick about the KanColle and AoBS canons:
>are there any plans to include the more esoteric ships and attendant
>shipgirls in Eyrie?

Probably not in any particularly prominent way, if only because the cast is already unwieldy as it is, but there are a few rattling around in the background, and we have a few cameos in mind for later eps.

Kancolle is in its tenth year now, which I suspect the original developers never expected, so the number of not only foreign ships, but also oddball auxiliaries and the like, has been going up the last little while as they've more or less run out of front-line IJN warships. For instance, since RCFR began they've added the Australian cruiser HMAS Perth and the Dutch cruiser HNLMS De Ruyter, and they recently added a Japanese utility ship called Sōya, which is not a warship at all but has, at various times, served as a lighthouse tender, a research ship, and an icebreaker. As you might imagine, being completely unarmed she's virtually useless in the context of the game, which is exclusively about combat, but she does have the highest luck stat in the entire game.

>I'm thinking along the lines of the Minas Geraes
>and/or Sao Paulo as grande dame elder stateswomen of the Allied
>contingent (even though they were a bit obsolete by WW2)

There are some true old-timers in the 14th Einherjar--we saw a few of them, at least in passing, in the big conference scene in RCFR 2. Most of them work as secretaries to the high-level representatives of their fleets in the Valhalla Admiralty (HMS Victory, for instance, is rarely to be found very far from Admiral Nelson's office, and HMS Dreadnought pretty much is the voice of Admiral Fisher).

Oddly enough, the Japanese pre-dreadnought battleship Mikasa still hasn't been implemented in Kancolle, despite the fact that people have been saying "uh, so where the hell is Mikasa" on every conceivable forum since approximately 12 hours after the game went live. I mean, granted, she was long since out of active service by the time World War II came along, but still, she is Japan's National Warship and all. :)

>or the Dutch
>submarines who were (under the evocatively named Admiral "Ship-A-Day"
>Helfrich) responsible for inflicting serious damage on the IJN despite
>reaching levels of outnumbered normally reserved for targets of the
>Bolivian Army.

Well, we've got some more submarine action coming up in RCFR 4, so I'll take that under advisement. :)

>ijn: we will take over indonesia for the glory of the japanese empire!
>dutch colonial navy consisting of like twelve boats and a kipper
>called fred:

(animated gif)

C'mon. This isn't reddit...

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
The Traitor
Member since Feb-24-09
1184 posts
Jun-24-22, 09:52 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail The%20Traitor Click to send private message to The%20Traitor Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
3. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #2
 
   Look, it was the only decent picture of the meme I could get to work. And it's apposite! Not just because of the context of the meme in question, but also because the orange turtle going Beast Mode seems appropriate for an almost suicidally aggressive Dutch military operation. =]

Actually, on the subject of shipgirls: how far back exactly do they go? Might we expect appearances from, say, the Mary Rose? Octavian's ships at the Battle of Actium? The raft on which two cavemen successfully punched the lights out of a mid-sized bear? It raises many questions. =]

If they (or you) do ever include the Minas Geraes-class dreadnoughts as shipgirls, it would probably be fun to reference the South American Dreadnought Race; this was an arms race between Brazil, Argentina, and Chile prior to the start of WWI in which, as one might surmise, these three South American naval powers began trying to nail together as many dreadnoughts as they could. I'm not sure whether it would be funnier to have them as bitter rivals concerning an enmity nobody else in the 14th understands... or to have them as a rivals-to-lovers polycule whose members snark at each other about an old enmity nobody else in the 14th understands.

---
"She's old, she's lame, she's barren too, // "She's not worth feed or hay, // "But I'll give her this," - he blew smoke at me - // "She was something in her day." -- Garnet Rogers, Small Victory

FiMFiction.net: we might accept blatant porn involving the cast of My Little Pony but as God is my witness we have standards.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Peter Eng
Charter Member
2005 posts
Jun-26-22, 01:49 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Peter%20Eng Click to send private message to Peter%20Eng Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
5. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #3
 
   >
>Actually, on the subject of shipgirls: how far back exactly do they
>go?
>

My opinion: It depends on what causes shipgirls. I have my own irrational idea of how shipgirls are created based on what we know of existing UF science. In my supposition, it is unlikely that shipgirls go back farther than the Age of Sail, and they'd be exceedingly rare because of the Ship of Theseus problem.

Of course, my idea is probably completely incorrect.

Peter Eng
--
Blah blah Spengler flux blah blah continuous exposure blah blah personification blah blah...


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Senji
Member since Apr-27-07
236 posts
Jul-01-22, 05:21 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Senji Click to send private message to Senji Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
6. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #3
 
   >Actually, on the subject of shipgirls: how far back exactly do they
>go? Might we expect appearances from, say, the Mary Rose?
>Octavian's ships at the Battle of Actium? The raft on which two
>cavemen successfully punched the lights out of a mid-sized bear? It
>raises many questions. =]
>
HMS Surprise of course...

L.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
CdrMike
Member since Feb-20-05
803 posts
Jun-26-22, 02:40 AM (EDT)
Click to EMail CdrMike Click to send private message to CdrMike Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
4. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #2
 
   >Oddly enough, the Japanese pre-dreadnought battleship Mikasa
>still hasn't been implemented in Kancolle, despite the fact that
>people have been saying "uh, so where the hell is Mikasa" on
>every conceivable forum since approximately 12 hours after the game
>went live. I mean, granted, she was long since out of active service
>by the time World War II came along, but still, she is Japan's
>National Warship and all. :)

Which is what makes it all the more surprising that she is in AL, has been for a couple years now, has two events dedicated to her, and has a prominent part in the plot as an opponent of the current leaders of the Sakura Empire (i.e. AL's totally-not-the-IJN faction). Keep in mind that unlike KC, the companies responsible for developing and publishing AL are based in China and the game was originally aimed for the Chinese market.

--------------------------
CdrMike, Overwatch Reject

"You know, the world could always use more heroes." - Tracer, Overwatch


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
MoonEyes
Member since Jun-29-03
1101 posts
Sep-28-22, 04:23 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail MoonEyes Click to send private message to MoonEyes Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list Click to send message via ICQ  
7. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #0
 
   "After all..." She glanced at Fubuki's back, a few paces ahead of her, and continued, "She is the mother of us all."


So...is this something I should really know and utterly missed? Or is this something that shall be revealed, if I just throttle my impatience and wait?

...!
Stoke Mandeville, Esq & The
Victorian Ballsmiths
"Nobody Want Verdigris-
Covered Balls!"


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
21972 posts
Sep-28-22, 04:46 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
8. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #7
 
   >"After all..." She glanced at Fubuki's back, a few paces ahead of her,
>and continued, "She is the mother of us all."
>
>
>So...is this something I should really know and utterly missed?

Possibly—I'm 87% sure it's come up somewhere at some point, but it's only alluded to in the text itself, so:

Fubuki was a revolutionary ship in her time. Destroyers before her were small, feebly armed ships, not much more capable than patrol boats—the name is actually short for "torpedo boat destroyer", which was all they were considered good for when it was coined. They had poor endurance and not very impressive seakeeping capabilities, so were really only fit for coastal defense, and incapable of operating far from their home ports without the services of a purpose-built destroyer tender (which would then have to be protected in one way or another).

Fubuki was designed to exploit a loophole in the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922, which restricted the signatories' authority to build capital ships, but didn't limit the number of smaller vessels they could field. Basically, the Japanese Admiralty wanted a ship that was exactly as big as she could be without falling under the rubric of a cruiser for treaty purposes, as fast and powerfully armed as was technically achievable, and with the endurance and seakeeping qualities to operate independently at long range for extended periods of time.

They got all that in the Fubuki class, which is why they were designated "Special Type Destroyers". When Fubuki entered service in 1928, she instantly redefined the standard for what a "destroyer" was, effectively from "oversized coastal patrol boat" to "miniature cruiser". Destroyers patterned after Fubuki became the worldwide go-to for everything from antisubmarine warfare to search-and-recovery to convoy escort to... well, anything a navy didn't absolutely need a cruiser-sized ship or bigger, or a flight deck, to accomplish.

Tashkent was built starting in 1937, nine years after Fubuki was commissioned, and was originally envisioned as sort of a next evolutionary step. The Soviets called them "destroyer leaders", extra-large destroyers intended to be the flagships of destroyer squadrons--really blurring the line between destroyers and light cruisers. Despite that uncertainty, kanmusu Tash thinks of herself as a destroyer, and as such, she recognizes and respects Fubuki as the first of the line. (By "us" in "the mother of us all", she specifically means destroyers.)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
MoonEyes
Member since Jun-29-03
1101 posts
Sep-28-22, 07:40 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail MoonEyes Click to send private message to MoonEyes Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list Click to send message via ICQ  
9. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv2 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #8
 
   So, yes then. Because I did know this, it just didn't click.
Hope Gryph can help her, and also, hope things all work out with Kongou, Maya and even poor "Buran", because that's clearly a thing that needs to end in a rescue and a good solid thrashing of bastards.

...!
Stoke Mandeville, Esq & The
Victorian Ballsmiths
"Nobody Want Verdigris-
Covered Balls!"


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
KtarraMoon
Member since Apr-3-14
4 posts
May-31-23, 11:50 AM (EDT)
Click to EMail KtarraMoon Click to send private message to KtarraMoon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
10. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #0
 
   I think that I understand Fubuki's extended dream. Most likely, she is undergoing a forced resurrection as a Fog hybrid. But because her "soul" is existing in Valhalla, she's experiencing all of the conversion process. And the Cyrillic is a botched resurrection spell. I mean, with references to Homecoming and Odin, that must be it. Hopefully, Corwin's method; as he is an actual Chooser of the Slain, has real Fog technology and has friends and family with experience in Returning machine intelligences, might resolve this.

Also, I love Vestal's and Akashi's discussion of differences and similarities in KanMusou manifestation and Fog Mental Models and Akashi manifesting her Rig form.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Peter Eng
Charter Member
2005 posts
May-31-23, 12:32 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Peter%20Eng Click to send private message to Peter%20Eng Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
11. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #10
 
   >I think that I understand Fubuki's extended dream. Most likely, she is
>undergoing a forced resurrection as a Fog hybrid. But because her
>"soul" is existing in Valhalla, she's experiencing all of the
>conversion process. And the Cyrillic is a botched resurrection spell.
>I mean, with references to Homecoming and Odin, that must be it.
>Hopefully, Corwin's method; as he is an actual Chooser of the Slain,
>has real Fog technology and has friends and family with experience in
>Returning machine intelligences, might resolve this.
>

That's pretty much my impression. The Cyrillic is a reference to Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which suggests it isn't resurrection magic, it's some sort of post-hypnotic trigger. Fubuki's glazed look upon hearing the English translation supports this idea.

Peter Eng
--
Insert humorous comment here.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top
Gryphonadmin
Charter Member
21972 posts
Jul-30-23, 10:28 PM (EDT)
Click to EMail Gryphon Click to send private message to Gryphon Click to view user profileClick to add this user to your buddy list  
12. "RE: (OOTR-18) RCFRv3 Persistence of Memory"
In response to message #11
 
   >>And the Cyrillic is a botched resurrection spell.
>>I mean, with references to Homecoming and Odin, that must be it.
>
>The Cyrillic is a reference to
>Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which suggests it isn't
>resurrection magic, it's some sort of post-hypnotic trigger.

Not sure how I missed this at the time, but better late than never, I should note: odin in this context is just the Russian cardinal number "one", nothing to do with the Norse god. (This would be more obvious in an audio format, since they're pronounced quite differently. The Russian word is spoken more along the lines of "ahdyeen".)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


  Alert | IP Printer-friendly page | Edit | Reply | Reply With Quote | Top

Conferences | Topics | Previous Topic | Next Topic

[ YUM ] [ BIG ] [ ??!? ] [ RANT ] [ GNDN ] [ STORE ] [ FORUM ] GOTW ] [ VAULT ]

version 3.3 © 2001
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited
Benjamin D. Hutchins
E P U (Colour)