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7/22/2025, 3:01:36 AM
6/29/2025, 9:08:14 PM
6/28/2025, 2:59:47 AM
A well written villain should always be a foil to the protagonist who serves to either force the protagonist to reform his belief system in some significant way to have them grow as a person that allows them to overcome the beliefs of the antagonist or reinforce their own preexisting beliefs in a way that also allows them to grow IE through immense struggle. Either way, the moral compass of either the protagonist or, indirectly, the reader must be interfaced with and made to be jostled about. The problem is /v/ is made of knuckle dragging troglodytes that have the moral fibre of a fruitfly that the moment it is challenged it crumbles into a pile of dust. This forces the average /v/ user to either side with the villain or throw a tantrum about the villain being "not truly evil".
6/18/2025, 10:32:43 AM
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