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#kamehameha wave
masenkoha · 5 months
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instructionsonback · 11 months
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NO WAY!!!
12” x 18”
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Jaevonn Harris
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freshthoughts2020 · 11 months
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NO WAY!!!
12” x 18”
By
Jaevonn Harris
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akkivee · 2 months
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kuukou: EAT SHIT
shakku: you’re 1 trillion years too early to even think about beating me!!!!!!!
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SHAKKU CAN TELEPORT
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pulseofthestars · 1 year
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“Hmm... Should I tell my other self about the alternative timelines and universes with their own mobile suits and Gundams?”
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They have magical powers in ishin or is it some wacky improvised heat moves?
All Fax No Printer these dudes are shooting straight up fire balls out of their hands and infusing their weapons with electricity and dark magic this aint an ichiban situation this shit's Actually happening
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keepscrollinghun · 1 year
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8zu · 2 months
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akira toriyama was the reason so many kids tried to do a kamehameha wave or screamed till they reached super saiyan. his impact in my life and others is immeasureable and i hope he knew that.
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three--rings · 9 months
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Most people don't have any understanding of what has been lost in Lahaina Town. Not just lives and property, but an entire town.
Most people hear "a city/town in Hawaii" and they picture probably resorts. And there are plenty of resorts nearby. But those are all fine.
Lahaina was an old whaling town dating back to the original colonization by white settlers. Before white people arrived, it was the capital of the island, where the high chief ruled, including Kamehameha the Great. The buildings are old, wooden, and crowded together. Obviously that was a problem in the face of the insanely fast wildfire.
But these weren't mansions, Mc or otherwise. It was a tourist town, a destination for cute, spendy shopping and dining, full of art galleries. (OMG THE GALLERIES. There was so much ART lost. There was original Dr. Seuss art in one gallery when I was there in January. That's gone now. Etc.)
But the people who lived and worked in Lahaina were mostly working class, working retail and restaurant jobs, living in old apartments and small houses. Lots of elderly, lots of non-white in a wide range of ethnicities, old hippies who have been there since the 60s and 70s. Yeah they were probably a little better off than people who drive in from other places to work in West Maui, at least because their property was high value, if they owned. But they lived without A/C, hung their laundry on lines, biked to work, called in sick to go surfing when the waves were up. There was a Chinese cultural center and a Buddhist temple, two different structures, if that tells you anything. Multiple museums housing historic items and cultural centers.
And the town will be rebuilt, in some form, I imagine. Or re-developed, more likely. People who are now homeless, who can't afford to rebuild or pay for two residences while the recovery happens will be bought out by deep pocketed developers. If they rebuild Lahaina Town I'm afraid it will be Lahaina Town tm by Disney.
Another fake paradise for tourists with lava rock from the Big Island. Another bit of Hawaii swallowed by capitalism and climate change.
I'm not painting everything about Lahaina as it was as perfect. Front Street was an often gaudy display of brand names and hucksters out to shovel in the tourist dollars. And of course the politics of Hawaii are incredibly complex and fraught in so many ways. I'm just a mainlander haole. I will never live on the islands, despite my family there constantly asking me to move. But I've spent more time there than anywhere I haven't lived, almost all of that time in West Maui.
My mom works in a building that is not there anymore. She just described that job to me as "the last job she'll ever have" as she's 79 and very happy with working two days a week selling t-shirts to cruise ship people. My brother has worked in a gallery on front street for the last ten years.
I don't know. A city of almost 15,000 permanent residents is just gone. 50 or so are confirmed dead, in some horrific circumstances from what I hear.
My mom says people are just walking around with thousand-yard-stares, aimless, clutching cell phones trying to get signal (there isn't any, but you can get lucky and get a call through. Some texts are going in but not out.)
So I don't know folks. Keep those people in your thoughts. If you can donate, I think this may be a good place because it's going to lots of local orgs on the ground: https://www.hawaiicommunityfoundation.org/maui-strong
I keep thinking of new sad things.
Anyway I'm going to leave you with a picture I took while strolling down Front Street one evening.
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akiizayoi4869 · 2 months
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I really don't know what to say right now. This is a sad day for Dragon Ball fans, and anime fans in general. Akira Toriyama and his work was such a huge part of my childhood. I remember pretending to go Super Saiyan when I was a little kid playing with my friends, imitating the Kamehameha wave, and eagerly awaiting for the next episode of Dragon Ball Z to come out. To say that I'm deeply saddened by this news would be an understatement. We lost a legend. May you rest in peace, Akira Toriyama.
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icy-watch · 3 months
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I didn't know Lloyd knew the Kamehameha wave blast.
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masenkoha · 1 year
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deusvervewrites · 3 months
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I know you meant the line about Coli being a "brilliant scientist" as a joke, but I kinda dig the idea of an average fighter being a prodigy in shaping her Ki, and trying to pass that down to her family.
Inko, while being pretty good at Ki shaping and Ki manipulation, mostly focuses on basic Ki Blasts, Ki Enhanced Melee attacks, and Explosive Wave attacks. She can pull out cool moves, like the aforementioned Emerald Lance, but sometimes ya gotta hit them really hard.
Izuku, on the other hand, is always trying to find cool shit to do with his Ki. His attacks lean more towards moves like the Sokidan or Double Tsuibikidan, being focused on high utility over raw power. (He's not immune to the "hit them really hard" mentality, he does take after his mother after all).
I wonder if Quirked Humans can still use Ki techniques? I can think of a few students who would love to be able to fire lasers from their hands.
Yeah I was exaggerating about her being a brilliant scientist (I had to do it) but I was serious that Coli knows a lot about Ki. She doesn't have a whole lot herself and doesn't really want to get into fights all the time, but she knows what she's doing.
The thing about Inko is that she does know how to use Ki the way Coli and Izuku do, she just prefers hitting opponents really hard. She's not mindlessly attacking, though, not like how Freeza relies on raw power over technique. Inko's moves tend to be like how the Kamehameha is meant to focus your Ki to output beyond what you're normally capable of.
Ki can be used by Quirked humans, but the only people who know Ki are the Midoriya family and reclusive hermit masters like Roshi or Shen of the Crane School.
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xb-squaredx · 2 months
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A Tribute to Akira Toriyama
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It’s been a bit over 24 hours since I’ve heard the news that acclaimed manga author, Akira Toriyama, has passed away, and frankly it’s still hard to process. I’d like to just say a few things to honor and mourn a man that I have never met, but whose work touched me and millions of others all over the world in ways I am only now really beginning to see.
Like a lot of 90s kids in the United States, my first exposure with Toriyama’s work was through the Dragon Ball Z anime. Despite the fact that I didn’t even know this was a sequel to a completely different series, and I had no real clue what anime even was at the time, I was captivated. For years I would race home from school and sit glued in front of the TV as Toonami would air the latest episodes. A phenomenon that rippled out across the world for several years in waves, from the original airing of DBZ, to some snippets of the original Dragon Ball and even later on with the anime-only continuation that was Dragon Ball GT, this series had such a hold on me. Friends and I would spend recess trying to recreate the iconic Kamehameha Wave, we’d scream trying to become a Super Saiyan, or take turns fighting each other in one of the MANY different video games based on the series over time. I’ve made friends through my love of Dragon Ball and it would go on to foster a love of anime and later manga. But little did I know just how far Toriyama’s influence would reach.
While I was never all that knowledgeable of his past work, particularly Dr. Slump, so many other series would be inspired by him or have his involvement in some way. Sonic the Hedgehog’s Super Sonic is an easy reference to spot, but less so was Cloud Strife’s garb in Final Fantasy VII being a dead ringer for Gohan’s outfit in the Cell Saga. As long as we’re talking about RPGs, Toriyama’s long history with various properties, from Chrono Trigger to Blue Dragon, and going back to the grandfather of all RPGS in Dragon Quest, it’s safe to say his legacy is felt in multiple mediums rather than just one. This wasn’t even limited to Japanese media either. I would see references to Dragon Ball in things like The Powerpuff Girls or Codename: Kids Next Door. Even well into my 20s, I was still seeing series inspired by him, like the whole fusion concept that made up Steven Universe. His reach was vast and multigenerational.
As I would get older, I would listen to Linkin Park AMVs on YouTube, with songs like Numb or In the End overlaid over the various hypest moments from the Dragon Ball series and its later movies. Even long after the series had finished airing, you’d still see the rare movie or special crop up, alongside an endless series of games trying to capitalize on the success of the Budokai Tenkaichi games. Toriyama was inescapable, and in a way it was comforting. You start to get used to his work being there, whether subtly or overtly. You never think about the day when he’ll be gone.
When first reading the article stating his death, it took a moment to really let it sink in. This man who had been with me, inspiring me throughout my childhood, was gone just like that. Over the past day I’ve seen the greater Internet in mourning, as people share their favorite manga panels, or iconic moments from the various anime interpretations of his work. Outpourings of fanart and inspirational stories from people who grew up with his work just like I did. There are people that got into bodybuilding to be just like Goku, for one. For another, during the finale of Dragon Ball Super there were massive watch parties set up in Mexico and even when authorities tried to stop the events they went forward anyway because they just had to see how Goku could finally defeat Jiren. I remember when Trunks first appeared in the anime, and I thought he was the coolest. I had to try to draw and replicate his first appearance, how he defeated Frieza, the person that took Goku so long to defeat, in a mere instant; I’m realizing now Toriyama might have been my real inspiration to start drawing, alongside who knows how many thousands if not millions of people. As sad as it is to see him go, to see so many people pay tribute and remember him, it really does lay bare just how influential he was, just how powerful art can really be.
It was only in more recent years that I’ve come to really respect Toriyama’s craft. Far beyond the screaming and power ups that many associate with him from Dragon Ball Z this was also a man who valued whimsy. He got his start as a comedy author, and for the longest time the Dragon Ball manga was just a humorous retelling of Journey to the West. The man loved a good bit of toilet humor and the occasional fourth wall break. Looking back at his manga, you can see just how amazing his panel work was, and how it still holds up. The ease at which he guides your eye from panel to panel, the expressiveness of his characters conveyed at all times. Many of his peers have called him a God of Manga, and I think they’re right to do so. The likes of Osamu Tezuka, the creator of manga, had called Toriyama his heir apparent, and stated he was “almost too good.” You can’t get higher praise than that.
Outside of his manga work, just his raw talent at creating iconic character designs needs to be praised. Taking a rather uninteresting mockup of the slime enemy in Dragon Quest, Toriyama would create perhaps the most iconic enemy in all of video games. His enemy designs are often cute and goofy, but occasionally can be quite ferocious. If nothing else, they are eye-catching and never boring. He was also a fan of vehicles and machines, with some really interesting modes of transportation shown off in a lot of his work. And then there’s the fact that so many of his characters have the trademark spikey haircut that has become shorthand for “anime hair,” that is understood to this day. To see him effectively retire after finishing with Dragon Ball back in the 90s, with the occasional contribution here or there, only to get right back to business as usual in the 2010s with amazing designs like Beerus or Android 21, not to mention his continual work on the Dragon Quest series all throughout that time…the man never lost his edge even once.
A sentiment I’ve seen over the last day or so is that Toriyama might, with no exaggeration, have inspired more artists than anyone else in modern history. So many people making their own “Saiyan-sonas” or being inspired to make manga of their own…we may truly never know how far his reach really was at the end of the day. But we do know that the “Big Three” of Shonen Jump throughout the 2000s can be attributed to Toriyama, as the likes of Eiichiro Oda, Masashi Kishimoto and Tite Kubo are all big fans of Toriyama, with Oda in particular worshiping the ground he walks on. Kubo is also on the record for stating that a letter from Toriyama, when his first draft of what would later become BLEACH was rejected, gave him the encouragement to try again and later be accepted into the magazine. And now these authors have gone on to inspire the next generation and so on and so on.
Over the last few years, we’ve lost a lot of creative figures in the manga industry. Toriyama now joins other similar legends, such as Yu-Gi-Oh creator Kazuki Takahashi as well as Berserk author Kentaro Miura. It is the end of an era, arguably of many eras, and it can be hard to imagine the future, but the Earth continues to spin and as Toriyama has inspired and influenced others, we too will inspire future generations with our work. It isn’t enough to call him a legend; he truly was in a league of his own, a legend among legends, and the outpouring of love for him across all manner of social media posts in just a little over a day alone is a testament to his immense talent and reach. I can think of no greater sendoff than the one that Eiichiro Oda gave him: “I pray for his soulful rest in peace. May heaven be the joyous world he envisioned.”
Rest in peace, and thanks for everything, Mr. Toriyama.
-B
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akkivee · 1 year
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just found out that one of the rehearsals for bat’s 8th live fell on hayama-san’s bday so since they were together, takeuchi-san gave hayama-san some red wine as a gift 🥺🥺🥺
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howlingday · 1 year
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Yang: Uh, what are you doing?
Jaune: We're doing a tai chi lesson with Ren. We're trying to get our bodies limber for the tournament.
Yang: Kind of looks like you're trying to do a kamehameha wave.
Pyrrha: " A come ay...?"
Yang: Yeah, you know, from Dragon Ball?
Ren: Many techniques from Dragon Ball are inspired by real world martial arts, tai chi included.
Yang: Yeah, but it looks like you're trying to be Goku.
Pyrrha: And who is Goku?
Yang: He's, like, the strongest fighter in the world, and his signature move is where he pulls his hands back like this, and he goes...
KAAAA... MEEEEE...
Yang: And light forms in his hands that gets bigger and bigger...
HAAAA.... MEEEEE...
Yang: And when he does this, a huge beam of light shoots out like-
HAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!
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Goodwitch: (Enters office) Professor Ozpin, did you feel tha- Oh!
Ozpin: (Scorched head to toe, Looking out of his new hole, Shattered mug in hand) Yes, Glynda. I am aware...
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Nora: ...REN! It happened again!
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