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Anonymous /d/11255235#11287132
5/14/2025, 3:52:21 AM
>>11286881
>Genuine failure is better than false hope.
I guess, but there is a certain hotness to someone thinking they were this close to avoiding a fate that was totally inevitable. They were forced to ruin their legacy with a humiliating pose and waste their last free moments, all for a game that was impossible to win.
>I can't decide which is worse.
I think the best of both worlds is if she gets a detailed explanation of what's going to happen to them all. She's going to decorate someone's lawn, her friend is going to become a fountain, her other friend will be chiseled down into a bust. She gets to muse on the humiliating and objectifying fate she could have prevented, without ever actually seeing it.

I like to imagine the gorgon has petrified so many people that she doesn't even consider the implications of it. To her it's just a fun, lighthearted little game she plays with girls. Her new girlfriend (who obviously never wanted this, but who's going to argue with a gorgon?) is mildly inconvenienced by her hilarious prank. When she smashes all the other statues, it's clearly just a light bit of teasing and a sign of devotion for her one true love.
- meanwhile for her beloved 'partner' it's a terrifying and humiliating and deeply violating fate.

>>11287052
>clothes are unpetrified.
I think that petrified clothes are a great way to pervert their old identity. A unique form of self-expression, and in many ways a confidence booster or a way to retain control over their appearance, is now a cum-stained mockery of their former self. Daubed in insulting graffiti and eroded from constant use and chiseled down in revealing places, it's now a perfect metaphor for their new life. Bonus points if they had a wardrobe malfunction as they got petrified, and now a nip-slip or an accidental cleavage shot is a permanent part of their legacy.