I assume its like everything else with double, the clothes morph with her body. Thats like asking if her luger is part of her or not.
I assume its like everything else with double, the clothes morph with her body. Thats like asking if her luger is part of her or not.
Yeah i guess it's part of her, but i was asking because she's wearing one of Stanley's tooth as a necklace so i was thinking that maybe the shades are real just like the tooth, maybe the shades she takes off are the real ones and the ones under those are the ones made from her cells.
Don't sharks lose and regrow teeth all the time?
That actually sounds kinda nice.
Keep in mind that some people collect their own nail clippings
Kira Yoshikage.
Sharks have multiple rows of teeth, with the front row being their main set. When one falls out, the tooth behind that one moves forward to take it's place. It's actually cool you pointed that out, as it made me notice how Stanley has multiple sets of teeth as well just like a real shark! Sometimes I forget just how much attention to detail this game goes into for all the character designs and animations (which is to no surprise considering how many references people have found with Robo-Fortune already)!
It's a joke to the fact that skullgirls itself seems like a show with an announcer and whatnot.
Cool, I had a feeling they might be people that worked on the game. Thanks.
Based on my talks with Alex about the story, I'm fairly certain it was 100% literal, with Grendel's spirit actively taking part in that fight. Sure, Valentine asserts that Beowulf wouldn't have stood a chance, but she's kind of a bitch, and her whole thing is talking down to people and generally being a sexy jerk. Past that, the climax of the story makes it clear that he actually does have it in him, if he digs deep.Back to Beowulf's Story Mode, how literal do you think the fight is with 'Grendel' at the end? I thought it was more of a spiritual thing when Grendel appears (like is his voice/appearance being all inside Beowulf's head), but by beating Marie-Grendel it would have still been the equivalent of wrestling him at his prime. Valentine said a person would never stand a chance against a gigan at full strength though, so I'm not sure if the fight at the end was intended as a 'weakened version' of him or something.
Valentine's a weak-ass hater.
^^^^^^^
T-TAKE THAT BACK.
Nice job, buddy.
We covered this, lol. It's like in an action movie, where you look at the entire thing and say, "wait, could he have actually killed like, all 5,000 of those bad guys without getting himself killed?" Yeah, he could. In that particular story :P
Yes
I always hated the when people say, "You can do it if you just believe in yourself"
That's not enough, of course you have to put in time and effort and find the power to be able to win. You can't just believe in yourself. However, you do have to believe in yourself. Determination is a prerequisite to success, not a guarantee, but even a hint of doubt will guarantee your failure. I think that's how Beowulf really stands out. The idea that he could ever lose never crosses his mind, and that alone gives him a lot of power, added to his already incredible strength and skill. While everyone else has parasites, special powers, and deadly weapons, Beowulf has that very unique ability of refusing to lose, and knowing what it takes to win.
That's why there's no doubt in my mind that even if Grendel had not been drugged, Beowulf would still have won.
as soon as you said that you automatically won
Actually I can deny that, there's nothing in the story mode to suggest that Beowulf was any different now than he was during his match against Grendel, there was no dialogue that painted him as someone who undeservedly thought highly of himself. You can argue that "well then I guess he's always egotistical", but that only makes sense if you're looking at him with a pessimistic predisposition. You know who really has an over-inflated ego? Eliza.
I never said this. At no point did I say that "Beowulf had to find true power inside himself and he became stronger after being defeated internally." You're misunderstanding what I'm saying. The point I'm trying to make is that Beowulf was always strong enough to defeat Grendel. He owes that strength to his own training and determination, and by the end I believe he's even stronger, at least in character.
The theme of his story mode isn't that "Defeat can make you stronger by helping you realize your own weakness, and that only after that can you push through overwhelming odds." That's a cliché reserved for underdog stories. As @Kai said a while ago, the real theme of the story is, "A true hero is always a hero, no matter what" and that "Nothing can extinguish the flame of a fighter who refuses to give up." Of course, this truth runs parallel once again with a story about fighters. When it was revealed to the public years later that Grendel was drugged, Beowulf decided to defeat the Skullgirl and prove that he always had the stuff, that he was always a hero. Beowulf may have been cheated, the fight may have been rigged, but Beowulf was never defeated, nether in the ring or in himself. That's the thing, Heroes never really lose. The idea that Beowulf would have lost against Grendel at his peak erases this lesson.
Way to completely ignore everything I said.
Did you actually read what he wrote?
So, a few things:I'm still not sold on the "he was always strong enough" though. A Gogan is not easy to take down if he could take down a Gigan why did they need to drug him. But anyway I say Bepwulf was defeated ineternally because he did retire after that match and went out with a so called wimper but Beowulf decided to come back stronger then before after realizing retirement is no way to live.
I might see Beowulfs character and story message different then you guys so I'm sorry then.
They (The Canopian Government & The Medici Mafia) felt the need to drug Grendel because they're naysayers who doubted that anyone could beat him. Of course a Gigan is tough to take down, that's why Beowulf was going to do it. The Government however didn't want to take any risks so they rigged the match.
Beowulf's career was founded on the patriotism born from the Grand War. After it ended with no clear winner, that patriotism that fueled his career was gone, so he had no choice but to pursue other lines of work. HE didn't go out with a wimper, his CAREER did, NOT of his own volition. Beowulf said it himself at the very beginning of the story mode, "I still got the howl, and the noise complaints to prove it."