You know, I love how when people list POC RWBY characters they forget to include the Asian ones because they have light skin.
Ruby seems to be biracial coded, or perhaps her dad just has a tan but I highly doubt that
Yang also
Monty mentioned Cinder’s appearance and said “Asians, man”. Yeah, there’s no Asia in RWBY, but she’s Asian-coded. It may have been an offhand joke, but it’s not like he said “Latinas man,” since she’s… Not?
Sun????
Literally everyone forgets Sun idk why?
TAI LITERALLY (again, unless tan, but that would be weird who has a permanent tan)
Only Ren is remembered as an Asian coded character for some reason
There are more than just Ren
the creators intended this
Scarlet’s visually based on a Korean rapper, so he can be considered Asian coded too lmao
>In 2013, Masuda took a trip to Spain, and really liked Barcelona apparently >Spain is a nation on the Mediterranean sea, with Barcelona being right on the coast >Horsea is featured in the concept art, both as a fountain
And on a flag
The flag here is important, because
>The flag of the Mediterranean features a Seahorse, because the Mediterranean sea is vaguely shaped like one
SPAIN CONFIRMED FOR REGION
if this is true but there isn’t a pair of pokemon based on don quixote + sancho panza i’m gonna scream
“Good” Ending: While the final battle is brutal, our heroes win the day. The only casualties are Lord English and his followers (Gamzee, however, is redeemed). With smiles on their faces and songs in their hearts, the Beta Kids, Alpha Kids, remaining trolls, and Calliope (and whoever else I’m forgetting) claim the Ultimate Reward. Hand-in-hand they come together, at last claiming their godhood for the universe they have worked so hard to inherit.
“Realistic” Ending: The final battle goes about as expected: our heroes win the day, but there is a significant casualty of beloved characters. The heroes that do remain mourn their losses but still claim the responsibility of godhood. They are forever changed by the tragedy, but they embrace their destiny with a newfound hope, brought to them by the Ultimate Reward which they worked so hard to achieve.
“Sadstuck” Ending: The final battle is won and a new universe created, but everyone dies except for John. Alone, he claims his godhood, forever steeled by the incredible loss he has had to suffer. His warm smile becomes a far-off memory, echoed only in the darkest corners of Paradox Space, in bubbles whose existence is dubious.
“Abstract” Ending: The final battle is fought and drudges on for eternity with no conclusive outcome. We pull back from the story in a manner similar to the Doc Scratch sequence at the end of Act 5 Act 2. In an infinite amount of timelines, the battle is won, and in an infinite amount of timelines, the battle is lost. Sburb itself shows its true face as a game of futility, in existence only to keep itself alive. Sessions bear more sessions, and so on and so forth. So long as Sburb exists, there can be no true peace in any universe. Thus, the ending is bitter and inconclusive. “I’m both Booker and Comstock,” John says, as he is drowned in the proverbial river.
“True” Ending: The final battle is won and the Ultimate Reward turns out to be the Jailbreak universe. The circle of stupidity is complete.