(Had a,'' Watch This Space,'' post because it loads faster.)
I wish you do not start to treat me any different from here on out just because you got your feelings hurt. We all like video games and, I guess, I am especially into the role-playing genre, which I, pretty much, knew from the, well, whenever I first picked up my virtual, ''Ten-point Power Sword,'' but, I did not mean to demean you(s), like, of course, and I am going to address the actual comment, that we'll pretend wasn't hidden behind spoiler tags because it, ''might've been derogatory;'' I was avoiding spoiling who becomes what, and what the what is, because, ''spoilers,'' can be based on the past and it's not someone's fault they were born at a certain point in time... you know what I mean? Here is the sentence that was spoiler tagged out, (just because I do not want to bullet point replies): Alex turns into a Dragonmaster, because it's like, ''Haha, boys always get dressed faster than girls in the thick of battle.''
Let's pick this apart. I included the, ''Cool,''-face just because I actually meant to the first time, and that's that... straight from God's name to your mouth. That comment was based on every single in-game cinematic movie. I always wondered why Alex got gypped in the film-reel for such an important scene and it took a while for it to really settle in that, he was, or, the video game creators were trying to make a point of the concepts of, ''time,'' in general. It's not a central theme to the story of this version of LunAr, for sure, but it, really is, just a universal theme in our lives which we can all relate to. 'For such an important scene,' Alex to me, at the time, seemed like he got the short end of the stick to be honest in contrast to every single other character... while he gets more screen time, this is what the story was all about; Him and his quest to be the Dragonmaster, even before all of that happened, and whether or not the plot goes back even a few pages before we, the players, started to play the video game. I related to Alex in that moment, because I always find myself wanting to shave off time in my life, too, when it comes to everyday stuggles, or everyday battles, like, at the time of my first playthrough: School, social activities, hobbies. There was a battle still to be fought, or, really, the war was just about to begin, because Alex succeeded in his own personal glory, and that dream of his was something even the baddies couldn't stop him from doing. I compared, or, juxtapozed that anime cinematic, really quickly, to just all of the other movies, and aside from a few of the funny quip-of-a-clip(s), for such a 'quality' scene, it didn't get the quantity of time, in terms of length-in-minutes, it deserved, at least, to me. I do not know how the art designers wanted that scene to be interpreted by the audience, of course, but in terms of a running in-joke, a lot of us American do feel cheated when we do not get, ''a lot,'' of something we paid for and bought for ourselves, our family... whatever. Or, whatever. Now though, I look back at it and it might be my number two anime movie in the whole, entire video game because Alex was a totally questionable main character in the sense that no one knew how in it he was to the very end; Nobody can dive into his mind ever, and he, really, was determined to finish what he started and was in it for the long haul.
I am keeping thingies within this said video game and, just, up against every other character, the one moment everyone was just apprehensively, waiting with bated breath to see happen, isn't talked about enough! (I, personally, didn't even want to talk about it at all, because I want players to have a thought on it in their own hearts, for themselves, like, always, but, it's fine.) Let's look at all the armoring/''clothes-removal,'' scenes, then. First of all, I do not recall any other scene where there was a physical transformation of a 'good' character in terms of actual garb being put on, or, ''getting dressed,'' whatever, semantics... getting dressed to me, means putting clothes on at the end of it all. You have the Magic Emperor, but that was just mega-strange. (Another topic, entirely for this awkward point.) We discussed the Vile Tribe Sisters, or the, ''Trinity Of Terror(?),'' cut scene and, while, that was just, honestly, a, really, good turning point in the video game; It was also, kind of, like, the art department getting to show off their stuff, too. I, as a gamehead, liked the scene, of course, from an appealing point of view, but do I want to agreeance with anything those three whatchamacallit's have to do with me, ever? ''No, thanks,'' I, personally, thought, and my, uhh, group of friends at the time said so, too, pretty much. They got the nickname, or, monickers of: ''Sisters Of Skank,'' or, ''Skanky Sisters.'' It was a very stripper-ish moment, you have to kind of admit. <- Pick that apart, too, if you want. I didn't feel they would've had that reaction, but, it opened my eyes to how they were the epitome of baddies at that point in time, seeing and hearing it from another's perspective. It just seems to me that while there's almost a more intimate feeling when it comes to various states of undress, nobody ever and no one even thinks or feel anything about an amateur swordsman putting their magic(al), Dragon-fused armor on. I hope that enlightens all of you to my viewpoint on that comment and realize it wasn't me even comparing to boys vs. girls in real life, but the boys and girls to the boys and girls in the video game itself.