|
Post by nero on Aug 21, 2015 17:12:35 GMT
Great page, but I hope Donald asks why he moved Annie to that white room.
|
|
|
Post by Refugee on Aug 21, 2015 17:36:24 GMT
I wonder if Zimmy saved Anthony from Diego's Curse. "For all his technical wonders, this Diego was unable to save her."
|
|
|
Post by darththulhu on Aug 21, 2015 18:31:58 GMT
Can we talk about how Zimmy's the best thing instead? Even Tony agrees with that! It kind of goes without saying. "Zimmy! Best thing ever!" is just Science
|
|
|
Post by darththulhu on Aug 21, 2015 19:10:34 GMT
I'm so happy that people have now completely rationalized Zimmy's years-long psychological abuse of Gamma and are heralding her as the best thing. Chances that Anthony will similarly and retroactively transition to best thing once he's settled in as part of Antimony's magical girl support squad and done something useful for her: very high. Well, yeah. That's how this works. Gamma's utter codependency? Bygones! The various canid-god kill-spirits? Annie's best buds! Receiving a "gift" that physically carved one friend into pieces and irreversably changed a second friend forever ... in under a minute? Totally worth working directly for the guy who gave that! Anthony will almost certainly be "misunderstood huggie-guy" very soon, unless this chapter is a pivot-point to Annie being much more adult in her assessments.
|
|
|
Post by mordekai on Aug 21, 2015 23:03:27 GMT
I'm so happy that people have now completely rationalized Zimmy's years-long psychological abuse of Gamma and are heralding her as the best thing. Chances that Anthony will similarly and retroactively transition to best thing once he's settled in as part of Antimony's magical girl support squad and done something useful for her: very high. Calling Zimmy and Gamma's relationship abuse oversimplyfies it too much. Zimmy is a very, very, very disturbed and damaged girl who is completely dependant on Gamma not only to keep her sanity, but to stop her power from leaking to the outside world and devour her and everybody else in a radius of who knows how many miles. And Gamma is some kind of martyr who sacrifices herself for Zimmy and for the all the people around them. Zimmy can't stop being what she is, and Gamma is the only thing that prevents her power from going wild. Zimmy just has no choice or option. I mostly put the fault of Zimmy and Gamma's suffering on the Court; if they can't help Zimmy, they should at least send them to Mount Waiʻaleʻale in the island of Kauaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands, where it rains 350 days per year and Zimmy could live an almost normal life, besides her inability to sleep. I don't know if there is any village by Mount Waiʻaleʻale, but Quibdó, in Colombia, has 304 rainy days per year, and the town of Hilo, in Hawaii, has 274 rainy days per year. Not as good, but closer to the Court is Stornoway, Outer Hebridies, with 252 rainy days per year, almost evenly distributed among all months. Zimmy is at fault only for lying to Gamma, telling her that everybody hates her so she won't go away; that is a horrible thing to do. But Zimmy is a horrified, desperate child in pain, one who doesn't receive any help from her guardians, you can't expect her to develop into a sane, good person.
|
|
Sadie
Full Member
I eat food and sleep in a horizontal position.
Posts: 146
|
Post by Sadie on Aug 21, 2015 23:48:57 GMT
Calling Zimmy and Gamma's relationship abuse oversimplyfies it too much. It's certainly not the healthiest relationship around. Her lying to Gamma in an effort to isolate her is abusive and has the chance to get worse as they get older. I like to believe there's some hope for them on that front, though. Zimmy has shown willingness to seek out help for Gamma's sake (asking Annie take over as etheric heat-sink so Gamma can sleep some) and to endure personal discomfort to allow Gamma to do stuff she enjoys (going on the boat trip). Gamma, additionally, isn't afraid to confront and call-out Zimmy when Gamma disagrees with her actions. Those are all good signs, but that jealousy/insecurity is a still HUGE problem. But holy shit, do I love the suggestion of sending Zimmy and Gamma to Hawaii. I want a picture of Zimmy in a Hawaiian shirt yesterday.
|
|
|
Post by The Anarch on Aug 22, 2015 0:37:00 GMT
Did we already see this from Zimmy's point of view? Which chapter was that? Divine
|
|
|
Post by Sky Schemer on Aug 22, 2015 1:59:00 GMT
I'm so happy that people have now completely rationalized Zimmy's years-long psychological abuse of Gamma and are heralding her as the best thing. Calling Zimmy and Gamma's relationship abuse oversimplyfies it too much. Plus, when, exactly, was the last time we actually saw Zimmy mistreat Gamma? It's been a long time. As in, Chapter 19. While we can't be certain of what happens off screen, Tom has given us more than a few scenes of the two of them since then, the most recent being in "The Torn Sea" where Zimmy was quite selflessly doing something solely for Gamma's benefit. It seems to me that we've been shown a more confident, more assertive Gamma. Maybe Zimmy has grown up a little, too, since we first met her.
|
|
|
Post by dramastix on Aug 22, 2015 3:23:08 GMT
Which is a funny sort of belief in that universe where etheric effects are demonstrable. Not scientific at all in the circumstances. Kat's had similar reactions, so maybe it's just some sort of widespread convenient genre blindness. (And now I had to go see if there's a page named "genre blindness" on TV Tropes and had to read a half-dozen pages as punishment.) In the video retrospective (I think it was for Chapter 21, Blinking), Tom talked about how he sort of set himself up for that inconsistency, that in a world where magic clearly exists, there are people who flatly don't believe in it. But at this point I think he's just running with it, and if even the Court prefers to refer to it as "etheric sciences," then maybe the wider world of the comic remains skeptical about the role of magic/ether/&c. I feel Anthony's an introvert. Probably the type that needs to have everything in order and thought out and logical. If it's not, he is lost. He's set up firmly in the world, not understanding feelings. Not understanding etheric stuff. He is like the Court, dabbling in things he cannot grasp. He was so sure there had to be a scientific explanation and a method to save Surma, but there is none. There cannot be. [...] Not that I'm trying to excuse him, being myself (that is the introvert favoring feeling, harmony and understanding ), but I'm nevertheless trying to understand the situation. Perhaps he knows no other way. He's an obvious introvert. That merely means that he is more motivated by internal mind states than by outside interactions. But that would not explain much of his behaviour beyond his quietness. What he has are serious problems understanding and interacting with others, something quite different. Most likely it's Aspergers but only Tom knows. And yes he does want far too much order in his life, probably a consequence of the same psychological problems that give him difficulty understanding and interacting with others. I don't think being an introvert or having OCPD or ASD or PTSD or whatever his psychiatric acronym is ('cos it's got to be one of them) explains or justifies his behavior toward Annie, given what we've seen so far, and especially given that he didn't blame Annie for interfering with his communication with Surma, as some thought would happen. If he thought Annie was the one who hit him, that would have provided a tidy explanation for his animosity, so now I'm just curious to see what else could have shut him down emotionally so completely around her. Maybe he's trying to cut off her connection with anything etheric, as others have suggested, thinking that it must all be destructive?
|
|
|
Post by TBeholder on Aug 22, 2015 5:05:29 GMT
Maybe protect her from something - but I'm not sure it's the Court. The logical step for that would be to transfer Annie out of Gunnerkrigg to another, more ordinary school. (Though that would make it harder to continue the story.) Again, that would mostly make it harder to plausibly continue Anthony Carver's story. Unless he gets stuck as a ghost (and in case Coyote happens, maybe not even then). Actually, there's as strong a parallel to be drawn between Gamma's utter devotion to Zimmy despite the fact that she knows Zimmy's habit of gaslighting her to undermine her relationships with other people and Annie's kneejerk defense of her dad no matter what he does as there is with Ys and Coyote. Not really. Gamma was arguing with Zimmy frowning and stomping foot, and even slapping her upside the head (for trying to bite City Face's head off). Zimmy would probably say "huh" out of mixed feelings because her own parents don't remember her and then give Anthony the finger when he tries to question her about what happened. It's unlikely to be that easy. Besides, it opens possibilities for amusing complications. Such as Red walking in when he stops babbling. Or even when he leaves, but still is in hearing range. - Hey, toothyface, what's that jerk's name? - Oh no... They ALL know!!! That's why her class stared at me like this! (runs off) - Huh? - Heh. Here's what I don't understand. How can Tony be this ignorant about Annie and Surma? A lifetime's worth of practice. Looks like it.
|
|
|
Post by warrl on Aug 22, 2015 5:07:43 GMT
I don't know, Zimmy is probably the scariest entity in the Court. The title of 'scariest entity in the Court' depends on your point of view. If you asked Zimmy who the scariest entity is she might say Kat is hands down. Someone else might nominate Reynard and then there's Jones. There are plenty of candidates and we don't even know all the players. Zimmy is just so unique. Her ability to distort reality allowed her to not only tap into a private etheric call, Tony referred to it as a vision, she also manifested in the middle of it physically enough to give Tony a message he could hear and a punch so solid it broke the connection and left a physical scar. Yes, she's scary but she is one of the heroes of this section of the story. The other is Gamma for getting her to help Annie. Zimmy is the scariest because she can do the most psychological damage. Annie is the scariest because she can do the most physical damage. George is the scariest because if she decides to damage you, you won't know she's coming until the damage is done. Jones is scariest because Zimmy, Annie, and George could attack her simultaneously and she'd go "Oh, did you want me for something?" (Coyote? Ysengrin? Not in the Court.)
|
|
|
Post by Refugee on Aug 22, 2015 5:49:08 GMT
Jones is scariest because Zimmy, Annie, and George could attack her simultaneously and she'd go "Oh, did you want me for something?" Maybe not, if Annie attacked her with Coyote's tooth. But oh, man, I'm not sure it would be a good idea to even snip one hair. She might unravel completely; not even she knows what she is.
|
|
|
Post by imaginaryfriend on Aug 22, 2015 6:36:21 GMT
Zimmy would probably say "huh" out of mixed feelings because her own parents don't remember her and then give Anthony the finger when he tries to question her about what happened. It's unlikely to be that easy. Besides, it opens possibilities for amusing complications. Such as Red walking in when he stops babbling. Or even when he leaves, but still is in hearing range. - Hey, toothyface, what's that jerk's name? - Oh no... They ALL know!!! That's why her class stared at me like this! (runs off) - Huh? - Heh. Your standards are too low. An amusing complication would be if Anthony and Antimony ran into Jenny and Jack on the street and Jenny revealed that the truth of this chapter was simply that Anthony stumbled on her coven's dark sabbat in the wild. After beating him into a concussed state they were impressed by his devotion to his wife, took pity on him as he babbled his story and begged for help, and agreed to help him call into the beyond (cover the charges via RotD long distance) and "reach" the gates of the underworld (ether) via their unholy rites and special herbs (topical anesthetic, some other stuff). Once the Crone (the 76yr-old lady peeking out of the mouth of the swine mask) had been ritually satisfied (uh-oh) the ceremony commenced; the chorus chanted ( Blue Oyster Cult) and the hand of glory was constructed (nobody else volunteered theirs). Too bad the ritual was impinged on (signal got jacked) by a distant malevolent force (Zeta). Afterwards they returned him to civilization where he could summon medical aid (dropped off by a Taco Bell all-nite drive-thru). And if he's listened to that mix tape why not pass it on to Antimony? OMFG we should all go get ink right now. On reflection I'm not sure Zeta would even recognize Anthony. She only saw him for a moment, he was beaten up, and she sees odd stuff and people who aren't real on a regular basis. Also not sure Antimony has enough information from the dialogue to understand that it was Zeta or not; if there was more exposition in panel 2 it could be that she does but if not, then she doesn't.
|
|
|
Post by TBeholder on Aug 22, 2015 8:22:41 GMT
Jones is scariest because Zimmy, Annie, and George could attack her simultaneously and she'd go "Oh, did you want me for something?" Yes, but it's more like... basically, she combines best features of Mary Poppins and Terminator. Jack apparently had a good look at the Terminator side. An amusing complication would be if Anthony and Antimony ran into Jenny and Jack on the street and Jenny revealed that the truth of this chapter was simply that Anthony stumbled on her coven Given her resemblance to Zimmy, either this would change her looks like this as a permanent side effect (in a way she like, yes) or this becomes too much of a contrived coincidence. But you have a good point here, in that Tony running into Jenny could be even crazier. And more probable, because she can be found walking around with Jack (while Zimmy seems to be more of lair type), and she's more likely to visit Annie when there's no emergency (well... more than it already is) on either side.
|
|
|
Post by Jelly Jellybean on Aug 22, 2015 13:25:23 GMT
The title of 'scariest entity in the Court' depends on your point of view. If you asked Zimmy who the scariest entity is she might say Kat is hands down. Someone else might nominate Reynard and then there's Jones. There are plenty of candidates and we don't even know all the players. Zimmy is just so unique. Her ability to distort reality allowed her to not only tap into a private etheric call, Tony referred to it as a vision, she also manifested in the middle of it physically enough to give Tony a message he could hear and a punch so solid it broke the connection and left a physical scar. Yes, she's scary but she is one of the heroes of this section of the story. The other is Gamma for getting her to help Annie. Zimmy is the scariest because she can do the most psychological damage. Annie is the scariest because she can do the most physical damage. George is the scariest because if she decides to damage you, you won't know she's coming until the damage is done. Jones is scariest because Zimmy, Annie, and George could attack her simultaneously and she'd go "Oh, did you want me for something?" (Coyote? Ysengrin? Not in the Court.) Allow me to stretch this further.... Kat is the scariest because we've seen how easily she can give life and how easily she can take it away. Paz is the scariest because she can give love, or she can take love away.
|
|
|
Post by sakyru on Aug 22, 2015 16:20:42 GMT
Yeah, we've had everything else satisfactorily explained, and nothing has really explained the odd coldness. I think it might be useful to refer to this page? Tony is reading to me as though his coldness towards Annie is the result of feeling an intensely crippling form of whatever he was feeling towards Brinnie at the time, which was a mix of being distraught and having a huge amount of pressure on his shoulders. There's also parallels between him and Annie to draw, to support how both of them tend to just shut down and try to act calm in emotionally stressful situations (a parallel that is visually drawn by how they both do the nail thing): here and here, sharing the similar trait of using masks to hide the fact that they are incredibly emotional people. Jones has confirmed before that Annie's coldness is a result of her father's influence, which deepens the parallels between their behaviour as well, and if we use Annie to infer Tony's behaviour (such as splitting her fire elemental from herself for example, in order 'not to break down like a complete fool', together with Donny's explanation about how tiny things can matter a lot to him, it seems as though he's really just built up this very psychologically unhealthy barrier between him and his daughter because breaking that down will mean that things will get very messy emotionally, and the Carvers seem to be really bad with feelings and looking like complete fools. EDIT: Oh yes, and like some people have already mentioned there's also the dealio of him almost murdering his only daughter to save his wife, etc. That in addition to bad forms of stress management.
|
|
|
Post by imaginaryfriend on Aug 22, 2015 17:58:23 GMT
An amusing complication would be if Anthony and Antimony ran into Jenny and Jack on the street and Jenny revealed that the truth of this chapter was simply that Anthony stumbled on her coven Given her resemblance to Zimmy, either this would change her looks like this as a permanent side effect (in a way she like, yes) or this becomes too much of a contrived coincidence. But you have a good point here, in that Tony running into Jenny could be even crazier. And more probable, because she can be found walking around with Jack (while Zimmy seems to be more of lair type), and she's more likely to visit Annie when there's no emergency (well... more than it already is) on either side. Yes but Anthony running into Jenny and mistaking her for Zeta would be less of an amusing complication and more of the plot just advancing in the usual "youthful mistakes/adults hurting people on purpose/love makes you do strange things like hurt the ones you love" way and now it's time to push Anthony back off his current relative island of normalcy in favor of more crazy shenanigans (like stalking the young witch and keeping it secret from his daughter). Yes, that's the enjoyable read that we fans have come to love but it's no Robox dancing the J-shake. It might *lead* to an amusing complication when Jenny catches Anthony in her back yard wearing a trenchcoat and peeking in her bedroom window, and the incident causes friction between Jenny and Antimony (don't say it) thus derailing the gang's plans to free Jeanne.
|
|
|
Post by Fishy on Aug 22, 2015 19:40:30 GMT
I recall it being said that the black eyes are a visual metaphor and everyone in the comic actually sees them properly. So even worse than this, seeing your wife turn into your daughter turn into a red eyed burning demon girl with spiked teeth. Who sucker punches you. Any chance you have the link to that info? I believe you, but I'd be curious to see the context/source. At the moment the website redirects to OkCupid when looking at specific questions, but from the list of Zimmy questions from Tom's formspring, just about any question concerning Zimmy's eyes gets the answer "Visual metaphor." What is with Zimmy's eyes? Why are they all....crazy?
Visual metaphor.
|
|
|
Post by setrain on Aug 22, 2015 20:14:48 GMT
Yeah, we've had everything else satisfactorily explained, and nothing has really explained the odd coldness. He's upset about accidentally hurting her. Since he's a control freak, his solution is to reassert control by hurting her on purpose.
|
|
|
Post by zimmyzims on Aug 23, 2015 16:25:14 GMT
Just signed in to express my joy with Tom's writing (and generally the art on the last few pages). I had expected Anthony to be a tragic character, who ends up hurting his loved ones and himself because of the good he tries to do. I half expected it to be because of contradictions between his work for Court and what he tries to do for his family. But Tom's writing was much better: what more tragic than hurting your loved ones because of what you do for them? This is excellent, and very much in line with what I've seen the story to be about since we first started with the prophecy of Kat becoming a robot deity. Thank you Tom! I'm eagerly waiting to see what will be Tony's role in the final events of the story. By now Anthony certainly has knowledge of the etheric beings and whatever brought him back to the Court now may have to do with that, and with Annie related to that. Earlier on Anthony pointed out that he was naive thinking that Court was unaware of his goings. So, I now expect Court still to have something to do with Anthony's adventure and either the way it turned or the way it will turn after he cut his hand to make an antenna.
|
|
|
Post by jasmijn on Aug 23, 2015 17:27:13 GMT
I don't know, Zimmy is probably the scariest entity in the Court. The title of 'scariest entity in the Court' depends on your point of view. If you asked Zimmy who the scariest entity is she might say Kat is hands down. Someone else might nominate Reynard and then there's Jones. There are plenty of candidates and we don't even know all the players. Let's not forget Paz!
|
|
|
Post by Trillium on Aug 24, 2015 3:23:55 GMT
The title of 'scariest entity in the Court' depends on your point of view. If you asked Zimmy who the scariest entity is she might say Kat is hands down. Someone else might nominate Reynard and then there's Jones. There are plenty of candidates and we don't even know all the players. Let's not forget Paz!You are right, another candidate. Paz is subtle but she's got the watts.
|
|
|
Post by TBeholder on Aug 24, 2015 3:34:39 GMT
Yes but Anthony running into Jenny and mistaking her for Zeta would be less of an amusing complication and more of the plot just advancing in the usual "youthful mistakes/adults hurting people on purpose/love makes you do strange things like hurt the ones you love" way and now it's time to push Anthony back off his current relative island of normalcy in favor of more crazy shenanigans (like stalking the young witch and keeping it secret from his daughter). Yes, that's the enjoyable read that we fans have come to love but it's no Robox dancing the J-shake. It might *lead* to an amusing complication when Jenny catches Anthony in her back yard wearing a trenchcoat and peeking in her bedroom window, and the incident causes friction between Jenny and Antimony (don't say it) thus derailing the gang's plans to free Jeanne. Ah. I see - we have different methodology. You are trying to see specific long plot twists. I only look for the maximum of possibilities for crazy mayhem within 2-4 moves, on the assumption that long-term it's going to be twisty no matter what (given how consistently we fail to predict plot twists in the comic as it is), so the long term twists are either left alone as completely undefined or treated as a random-wandering sequence (which is much the same, but somewhat more likely to continue in the direction of an early turn). My interpretation of "The research I was involved in" is that he used the Court's project as a pretext to open certain doors for his own quest. In which case it would be unreasonable to expect NOT meeting some of the Court's contacts now and then. The rest may be his self-importance speaking again.
|
|
|
Post by fwip on Aug 24, 2015 3:44:09 GMT
The title of 'scariest entity in the Court' depends on your point of view. If you asked Zimmy who the scariest entity is she might say Kat is hands down. Someone else might nominate Reynard and then there's Jones. There are plenty of candidates and we don't even know all the players I'm fairly certain that we're a long, long way from knowing all of the players. I'm honestly guessing that the Court has more scary shit in it than the Forest. (sorry to jump into the conversation like this)
|
|
|
Post by imaginaryfriend on Aug 24, 2015 6:53:47 GMT
Yes but Anthony running into Jenny and mistaking her for Zeta would be less of an amusing complication and more of the plot just advancing in the usual "youthful mistakes/adults hurting people on purpose/love makes you do strange things like hurt the ones you love" way and now it's time to push Anthony back off his current relative island of normalcy in favor of more crazy shenanigans (like stalking the young witch and keeping it secret from his daughter). Yes, that's the enjoyable read that we fans have come to love but it's no Robox dancing the J-shake. It might *lead* to an amusing complication when Jenny catches Anthony in her back yard wearing a trenchcoat and peeking in her bedroom window, and the incident causes friction between Jenny and Antimony (don't say it) thus derailing the gang's plans to free Jeanne. Ah. I see - we have different methodology. You are trying to see specific long plot twists. I only look for the maximum of possibilities for crazy mayhem within 2-4 moves, on the assumption that long-term it's going to be twisty no matter what (given how consistently we fail to predict plot twists in the comic as it is), so the long term twists are either left alone as completely undefined or treated as a random-wandering sequence (which is much the same, but somewhat more likely to continue in the direction of an early turn). Not exactly, I prefer maximum sustainable yield of crazy. Think of an over-fueled fusion pile with quasar-like effects; a wonderful hash that regularly spins out extra explosions.
|
|
|
Post by wombat140 on Aug 24, 2015 17:37:07 GMT
"That thing" presumably doesn't know he didn't do it on purpose, so if she met him I expect she'd punch him again. (I think she'd be pleased to know someone was referring to her as "that thing", she seems to thoroughly enjoy being scary ) I think the reason the forums aren't bashing Coyote or Zimmy as much as Anthony is simply that that's not news. Coyote is, to a first approximation, a villain; Annie belongs to the Court, Coyote is the leader of the Forest, as things stand he's essentially the enemy. He's expected to do dastardly things. Sometimes you have to deal with him, Annie especially because he's the gateway to all the magical things she needs to know as a medium. But saying he's ruthless and can't be trusted would be like saying that grass is green. Zimmy isn't a villain exactly, but ever since she appeared it's been a given thing that anything involving those two will be strange, dark and profoundly messed-up. Whereas we've all been hoping for Annie's long-lost father to return ever since Chapter 2, and now he turns out like this! I agree with Mordekai about Zimmy, though. It's hard to stop someone sacrificing themselves for someone if they really want to - especially in this case since, if you did, it would probably be fatal to Zimmy and possibly anyone else standing nearby. And Gamma loves helping Zimmy, remember (except when she has to sit up all night). (Of all the paranormal pupils she must be the one who gets to use magic most often, not excluding Annie. That has to be something in itself.) There was never going to be a way of dealing with Zimmy that wasn't abnormal; what the two of them have arrived at seems as good a solution as any you could expect. The Mount Waiʻaleʻale idea is inspired though, especially if Zimmy wears a Hawaiian shirt If Per was talking specifically about the translation incident in "Power Station", though, yes, that was 100% out of order. To be fair, Zimmy was only 13 and has far more reason to be a thoroughly screwed-up person than Anthony; that doesn't make it right though and I bet Annie chewed her out about it later. Somebody should teach Gamma English already anyway, it's not safe to be totally reliant on someone as precarious as Zimmy. Another way in which the Court seems to be making no particular attempt to help them out. That's besides the whole question of whether Zimmy's powers could be handled any better. With all the leads Tom's given us - the resemblance to dreams or hallucinations, the link to some other dimension, the insect theme, the overheating, and the predictable effects of rain, thundery weather, and the energy-gathering machine - if I'd been a Court witch I'd have been on it like a shot, out of sheer academic curiosity if nothing else; but the Court's policy seems to be to leave them completely to their own devices. Makes me wonder whose benefit they really are there for?
|
|
|
Post by matoyak on Aug 24, 2015 23:07:29 GMT
Makes me wonder whose benefit they really are there for? The Court's. The Court does nothing that doesn't advance its own aims.
|
|
|
Post by Jelly Jellybean on Aug 25, 2015 2:31:16 GMT
Makes me wonder whose benefit they really are there for? The Court's. The Court does nothing that doesn't advance its own aims. So the Court didn't take in Zimmy and Gamma to save Birmingham? In my head cannon, Zimmy is Godzilla, the Court is Monster Island, and the rest of the World is Tokyo.
|
|
|
Post by matoyak on Aug 25, 2015 3:11:59 GMT
The Court's. The Court does nothing that doesn't advance its own aims. So the Court didn't take in Zimmy and Gamma to save Birmingham? In my head cannon, Zimmy is Godzilla, the Court is Monster Island, and the rest of the World is Tokyo. Depends. Does the Court have something it needs Birmingham intact for?
|
|
artezzatrigger
Full Member
Ominous latin chanting
Posts: 185
Member is Online
|
Post by artezzatrigger on Aug 25, 2015 8:46:04 GMT
So the Court didn't take in Zimmy and Gamma to save Birmingham? In my head cannon, Zimmy is Godzilla, the Court is Monster Island, and the rest of the World is Tokyo. Depends. Does the Court have something it needs Birmingham intact for? Not specifically, but I imagine they'd want paranormal happenings kept under wraps, and a whole city being warped isn't exactly helpful towards that.
|
|