author: Grzegorz Mycka
so i just think it’s a great interpretation of the play
Welp, there you have most of Shakespeare’s non-comedic output summed up in one image.
This is bloody brilliant, pun fucking intended
author: Grzegorz Mycka
so i just think it’s a great interpretation of the play
Welp, there you have most of Shakespeare’s non-comedic output summed up in one image.
This is bloody brilliant, pun fucking intended
Hello!
I’m a new Deep Space 9 blog and I’m looking for people to follow! If you post a lot of DS9 or Star Trek in general, like or reblog this post and I’ll check out your blog/follow you! Thanks!
Anonymous asked:
howtofightwrite answered:
Well, he could just walk up behind her.
When someone’s got a knife to your back or the threat of a knife to your back, the gun becomes a lot less relevant. A knife also lets him kill silently, while the gun makes a lot of noise. He can use the knife to disable the primary arm (or both arms) which she uses to hold her gun, and then the problem is solved. Miss the artery, go for the muscle or, better yet, a tendon.
Here’s your problem: just because he needs her alive doesn’t mean he needs her whole or in one piece. He just needs to make sure she doesn’t bleed out, and can’t retaliate. If he can’t harm her, well, that’s entirely different. But need? Needs her alive is code for, “what fun Mr. Tactical Baton and I will have!”
-Michi
It’s here! Right in time for the summer solstice!
The soundtrack to the Solstice chapter of OneShot is [NOW AVAILABLE HERE!]
Featuring songs written by me and @girakacheezer, also includes 7 bonus tracks not in the game! Give em a listen!
Even though the design of the technology from TOS should seem outdated when compared to DS9, it never seemed anachronistic in the DS9 episode Trials and Tribble-ations. And I don’t know if it was the intention of the writers but I saw Dax’s lines above as helping as they imply the look of TOS era tech as a design choice rather than an outdated 1960s view of the future.