SJW Art and Extremes

Why does Tumblr have an obsession with vitiligo?

  • Suicide Girl model and America's Next Top Model contestant have it, spread on Tumblr, that's why.

    Votes: 670 16.2%
  • Stop fucking asking this this question.

    Votes: 482 11.7%
  • I swear to God I will start deleting these posts.

    Votes: 146 3.5%
  • Goddammit.

    Votes: 395 9.5%
  • ACTUALLY IT'S PART OF A DEEP FALSE-FLAG OPERATION TO TURN ALL BLACK PEOPLE WHITE.

    Votes: 2,445 59.1%

  • Total voters
    4,137
Okay, see, when you guys say "Tumblr Girls" or "SJW Art" I don't think about this sort of "changing clothing and anatomy" stuff, I think of this:
tumblr_n971ogZdPa1qkod18o1_1280.jpg
Ah yes, I remember the mini shitstorm this caused because the artist was the ebil antee ess jay ewe plebcomics
The problem is the striped leggings don't help the "fixed design" and feel like they kind of clash a bit. (I'll admit the original was a little too skimpy though.)

Here's some others from Repair her armor... (granted there are a few good ones)
-Once again, a magical girl gets away with being impractical.
Why are magical girls seen as sacred cows?
 
I always find it funny when the like something, they act as they have to jump through hoops to justify any "problematic elements" Just like the show like a normal person.

They can't understand that you can like something but have problems with it. Their worldview is really black and white.
 
Why are magical girls seen as sacred cows?
Because they are popular among tumblrites who like to come up with their own head-canons for them? It's like @Hat said, they like the show so it is an exception. Everything else however, gets eviscerated no matted how much logic something has that is similar to their precious magical girls.
 
If they aren't a racially ambiguous, chubby, young 20-sometthing with a shitty 'masculine' haircut than we can't let that slide.
This reminds me of something that has always made me uncomfortable about the SJW fetishization of PoC and "plus-size" figures, especially when they intersect.

Before I discovered SJWs, it was the white supremacists and other anti-black (Afrophobic?) racists whom I really butted heads with. They had a grand old time with the fact that today's obesity pandemic has hit African-Americans and other racial minorities even harder than white people, declaring that black women were inherently ugly and undesirable because they were disproportionately overweight. Many of them even claimed this trend was triggering black men to leave black women behind and date interracially. This actually isn't a new stereotype though; there is a history of black women being portrayed as overweight and sexually unattractive in racist caricatures (e.g. the so-called "Mammy" or "Precious" stereotype). Knowing that history and seeing that rhetoric still being pushed in this day and age, I must admit I feel a bit unsettled when I see SJWs pushing fat acceptance ideology onto black women.
 
First link looks like a potential idea if Risky were to have another form for players to fight (can't say since I haven't played much of Risky's Revenge) but then again, she could just build a giant robot skull head with a canon to fight. Outside of that, someone like @Jaimas could give their thoughts on the redesign and what could be wrong with it.

Considering the second link, how was the original in a seductive pose? It looks more like the pose of a warrior saying "come at me". It would make sense to say it is seductive if her ass was hanging out while having part of her cleavage shown. The edited armor could of looked less boring if a sort religious icon was slapped on to it along with keeping some of the gold color so it wouldn't stand out of place. Also just to sperg abit on the weapon, the cross guard could be a bit shorter just like in the original. Even then, the original looks as though it took a sort of creative license that doesn't have to adhere to being 100% historically accurate such as with the hair or armor. Even then, whose to say her armor didn't change in some way. If she did come from some otherworldy realm, what is to say she wasn't imbued with something like "the grace of God" to act as part of her armor or something.

At least the two links gets credit in that someone actually took time to draw them rather than open MSPaint and photoshop to make edits. As for the stockings in the third, I'd say it must be some tight belt used for each stocking, at the top as shown in one of the images.
Risky is more of large vessel type of engineer (if you've seen her final battle in Risky's Revenge). Under a better artist, the cannon armor would probably look better. Though I'd go more with a glowing, charge-up crystal instead of a cannon.

The color just feels off for a heavenly warrior. The dark gray doesn't go well with the boots and wings. White armor with the gold and blue trim (and the symbol from the before one) would work a lot better.

Why are magical girls seen as sacred cows?

That's a good question. Callhoun from Wreck-It-Ralph gets more flack for her outfit by these guys for having a thin waist, boobplate and having make-up on. Also that Raiden (Metal Gear Solid) can have high-heel boots, but Bayonetta can't even though both of them use their heels for battle (Raiden uses them to hold his sword when he needs his hands).
 
Last edited:
Eh, the outfits thing always gets me what with living in Japan. I think something people don't remember or even just understand is it was perfectly legal to own child porn In Japan last year, only production was an offence. One that is much harder to trace depending on evidence. It was only June of last year they made possession illegal.

I don't think anime fans, sjw and otherwise, understand how much some animation styles are linked to indecent images of children i.e magical girls essentially being nude before they become a 'hero'. I'll stop talking about it because I'll ween.

I'll leave it at that.
 
I always find it funny when the like something, they act as they have to jump through hoops to justify any "problematic elements" Just like the show like a normal person.
The logic goes that magical girl shows are inherently feminist because they have primarily female casts in positions of power, and are written for little girls to have a diverse set of role models. Any critical thinking about an individual show is not necessary, because all magical girl shows are feminist, and all for the same reasons that can be regurgitated verbatim.

I believe this line of thinking was birthed from weeb feminists who were still obsessed with Sailor Moon and trying very, very hard to uphold it as the greatest thing since sliced bread. While this demographic's love for that show is not unjustified - it was written by a woman, genuinely has diverse characters, and includes plentiful LGBT representation - most other magical girl shows really have no leg to stand on in regards to social issues, exposing these "feminists" as womanchildren in denial.

In fact, the subject of adoration in the post above is among the most egregious examples. Madoka Magica was explicitly written for the adult male periphery audience (think bronies), featuring a cast of teen girls with very flat personalities that constantly act like kicked puppies because the poor little waifus can't do anything for themselves. The creator is male and evidently incapable of writing women as people. It's exactly the opposite of what they want, but it's dark and edgy and has pretty colors, and that's really all that matters.

I don't think anime fans, sjw and otherwise, understand how much some animation styles are linked to indecent images of children i.e magical girls essentially being nude before they become a 'hero'. I'll stop talking about it because I'll ween.

I'll leave it at that.

...It doesn't really speak well of you that you're looking at sparkly silhouettes and thinking "child porn".
 
I didn't when I lived in Canada. Now that I live in Japan, eh, I question a lot of stuff. Like I said, trying not to ween haha.
 
  • Feels
Reactions: dookerbewitt
First link looks like a potential idea if Risky were to have another form for players to fight (can't say since I haven't played much of Risky's Revenge) but then again, she could just build a giant robot skull head with a canon to fight. Outside of that, someone like @Jaimas could give their thoughts on the redesign and what could be wrong with it.

Considering the second link, how was the original in a seductive pose? It looks more like the pose of a warrior saying "come at me". It would make sense to say it is seductive if her ass was hanging out while having part of her cleavage shown. The edited armor could of looked less boring if a sort religious icon was slapped on to it along with keeping some of the gold color so it wouldn't stand out of place. Also just to sperg abit on the weapon, the cross guard could be a bit shorter just like in the original. Even then, the original looks as though it took a sort of creative license that doesn't have to adhere to being 100% historically accurate such as with the hair or armor. Even then, whose to say her armor didn't change in some way. If she did come from some otherworldy realm, what is to say she wasn't imbued with something like "the grace of God" to act as part of her armor or something.

At least the two links gets credit in that someone actually took time to draw them rather than open MSPaint and photoshop to make edits. As for the stockings in the third, I'd say it must be some tight belt used for each stocking, at the top as shown in one of the images.

Some information you need to be aware of is in order when looking at Risky. It's a bit more than the fact that once again, Repair Her Armor decided to de-sexualize a character and took a character who was designed to be attractive and turned her as hideous as they could possibly make her.

The message fucksticks like RHA give is clear: Unless you're a work they approve of, you're "problematic" and need to be destroyed. Yeah, fucking Madoka is fine, having little girls fight in fucking outfits that any other character their age would fucking die in, but gods help you if you're in something they don't fucking worship. The fact that they'll extol for ten paragraphs the character design in Madoka and yet not fucking bother to research any of the characters they give this treatment speaks volumes.

But enough of shit I've repeated about a dozen times by now. Let's talk turkey and Risky fucking Boots. She's a pretty interesting villain and a surprisingly sympathetic one as of the newest game. Her outfit is actually thematically appropriate, too. If you feel the need, Kiwis, give my little article a read:

Bp0QFYqCcAAuNpu.jpg


For a moment, we'll ignore that, Risky's outfit is almost identical to Shantae's except stylistic differences. I pointed out that these people are fucking morons when it comes to cultural awareness enough. Again, Sequin Land is an Arabian setting and, as a rule, it's fucking hot.

That said, take a close look at her top and her belt. Notice that it resembles a skull? There's a reason for that: It's the Pirate Master's fucking head. In the past, The Pirate Master, a terrifying undead abomination of ridiculous power, ruled the land through fear, and Risky was his first mate. In this role, he was not terribly nice to her. It's patently obvious that he did some fucked up shit to her, and Risky was helpless to do much of anything about it.

The Pirate Master is, in Shantae canon, the single greatest threat that the region has ever known.

It took the combined efforts of every single Genie in Sequin Land to kill his ass, and the overpowering majority of them didn't survive the battle, including Shantae's mom (her body was never found, leading Uncle Mimic to believe Shantae's mom is alive somewhere). Shantae, a half-breed, is literally the closest thing to a Genie Sequin Land has anymore, and it's all because of this lich-like asshole:

s3pirate_master_teleport_out.gif


When the Pirate Master got his shit kicked in, Risky mutinied. She broke her chains, usurped control of the Tinkerbats, and using her skill with engineering, built herself a new ship and essentially took over his throne once the Genies killed his ass.

Because of his being an abusive prick, Risky decided to give the ultimate "fuck you" to her old boss, and rip his fucking skull off to help ensure he couldn't revive. It now serves as a decoration. That's how she rolls. Risky, if she has her way, is rarely in the thick of fighting, considering she has a ship and a goddamned army of Tinkerbats to handle that crap for her. She doesn't rely on armor, and she doesn't really need to.

In Risky's eyes, her getting into the thick of things means shit has failed, and now she needs to handle it the rough way.

It's Pirate's Curse though that gives us the most insight into this buxom buccaneer. By this point in the game, she's tried to take over Sequin Land and failed at it twice. Even at her worst (and Risky can be exceptionally cruel), she is nothing like the Pirate Master was. And yet despite this, she's still an adversary. She self-identifies as the bad guy. Other people call her a villain and she wears that label with pride. She's a bad girl, she knows it, and she makes no exceptions about this. She opposes Shantae not because she hates her, but because Shantae's the one fucking up her plans. She's also a fucking genius, as evidenced by the fact that she designs her own traps, weapons, vehicles, and equipment, ranging from a booby-trapped bathtub that she uses to capture Shantae to a boat that doubles as a walking tank. And in Pirate's Curse, she has to rely on her old enemy, because no one else will help her.

All of this is reflected in her character design.

2559006-shantaecurse_3.jpg


She's the kind of asshole who taunts her enemies, brings a gunboat to a knife fight, and plays enemies off one another (she did this to brutal effect in Risky's Revenge). She's both a skilled manipulator and completely aware of her own appearance. In her eyes, her outfit is just one more way of showing she's the best. She's acutely aware she's got a killer body, and is also keen on getting across that she is nobody to fuck with, and to drive this point home, is wearing the skull of the most powerful beast in the land as her fucking bra.

She's the most feared (and shockingly, admired by several of the townspeople) thing in Sequin Land after her old boss, one of the smartest people in the region, and with an eye for the big picture that's unique amongst the villains Shantae's fought. She's used to relying on nobody but her Tinkerbats (and they have barely any personality whatsoever), because relying on others leaves her vulnerable, and she despises being vulnerable above all else. Having to ask Shantae for help is hilariously hard for her in Curse, and a big part of where the humor from her interactions come from.

And the irony? She was kept by the Pirate Master essentially as chattel. She makes completely clear to Shantae that she had no free will under his power, and the Pirate Master, once revived, goes out of his way to humiliate her as brutally as a T rating will allow. He treated her like shit, and now he's fucking dead whilst she rules what used to be his. She's a brilliant metaphor for someone who wants to be remembered for more than her appearance, and someone infinitely more capable than her looks suggest. Thus, she seeks to conquer Sequin Land - because in her eyes, she is that fucking strong.

TL;DR: Birds fly, grass grows, sun shines, and SJWs miss the fucking point of a character design, shrieking that women with sexy bodies are inherently damaging. There's no evidence for it, no basis for it in reality, they just claim it.

Fuck these people, so fucking hard.
 
Last edited:
The logic goes that magical girl shows are inherently feminist because they have primarily female casts in positions of power, and are written for little girls to have a diverse set of role models. Any critical thinking about an individual show is not necessary, because all magical girl shows are feminist, and all for the same reasons that can be regurgitated verbatim.

I believe this line of thinking was birthed from weeb feminists who were still obsessed with Sailor Moon and trying very, very hard to uphold it as the greatest thing since sliced bread. While this demographic's love for that show is not unjustified - it was written by a woman, genuinely has diverse characters, and includes plentiful LGBT representation - most other magical girl shows really have no leg to stand on in regards to social issues, exposing these "feminists" as womanchildren in denial.

In fact, the subject of adoration in the post above is among the most egregious examples. Madoka Magica was explicitly written for the adult male periphery audience (think bronies), featuring a cast of teen girls with very flat personalities that constantly act like kicked puppies because the poor little waifus can't do anything for themselves. The creator is male and evidently incapable of writing women as people. It's exactly the opposite of what they want, but it's dark and edgy and has pretty colors, and that's really all that matters.

They'll buy anything so long as it fits with their agenda, won't they?

I could rant about how SJWs and their regulations for good female protagonists. To some of them, women who share the lead role in a show with men don't count, even if they outnumber the men.
 
Not gonna lie, I'd love to see one of these adamant costume revisionists do their own take on improving this design:
fi_ds_zaturnnah.jpg

For context:

The character is Zsa Zsa Zaturnnah, an affectionate parody of Darna (The Philippines' most famous "female" superhero) and the alter-ego of Ada, a gay hairdresser struggling to make a decent buck. Her outfit is designed to expose as much skin as possible since she was originally intended to be the new source of income for Ada (sexiness plus hairdressing = profit). It just so happens that her costume looks like that of a superhero's*.

I would just like to imagine the mental gymnastics they'd go through in redesigning her. She's the alter-ego of a poor, gay POC from a third-world country. Of course, they could just try to separate her and Ada as much as possible and not give any consideration to the story whatsoever but still. It'd be an interesting thing to see.

*At one point in the story she uses her gauntlets to deflect bullets being fired at a crowd and they break. They were just accessories of a costume after all.

Addendum:
Since I brought up Darna I might as well throw in her costume as well:

DarnaOrosco.Jpeg

It might be even more revealing than Zsa Zsa's (but Zsa Zsa's bosom is definitely bigger). I would also like to see said costume revisionists give her outfit a go while still keeping this in mind:

"Darna is a character that fused together the concept of the superhero with the traditions of Philippine folklore. The yellow/gold stars come from the Philippine flag, the loincloth (bahag) is a visual inspiration from native costuming, and the agimat concept come from Filipino traditions. Philippine folklore has a tradition of presenting humble, pure hearted mortals that are awarded amulets that allow them to (in a way) transform their virtues into superpowers that allow them to battle supernatural evil."​

Sources: [1][2]

Perhaps they'd just ignore all of this completely and give her plain old body armour. Perhaps they'd find a way to incorporate all that was mentioned into a more practical costume. Like I said, I'd love to see it either way and read about their thought process while redesigning Darna.
 
Last edited:
Not gonna lie, I'd love to see one of these adamant costume revisionists do their own take on improving this design:
fi_ds_zaturnnah.jpg

For context:

The character is Zsa Zsa Zaturnnah, an affectionate parody of Darna (The Philippines' most famous "female" superhero) and the alter-ego of Ada, a gay hairdresser struggling to make a decent buck. Her outfit is designed to expose as much skin as possible since she was originally intended to be the new source of income for Ada (sexiness plus hairdressing = profit). It just so happens that her costume looks like that of a superhero's*.

I would just like to imagine the mental gymnastics they'd go through in redesigning her. She's the alter-ego of a poor, gay POC from a third-world country. Of course, they could just try to separate her and Ada as much as possible and not give any consideration to the story whatsoever but still. It'd be an interesting thing to see.

*At one point in the story she uses her gauntlets to deflect bullets being fired at a crowd and they break. They were just accessories of a costume after all.
Don't forget the alter ego could in some way make the poor, gay POC in a way transsexual. Perhaps they might try to fix it by saying if the gauntlets were just a costume, why not give her some actual body armor or something. Really, one would like to see what sort of mental gymnastics they would do.
 
Not gonna lie, I'd love to see one of these adamant costume revisionists do their own take on improving this design:
fi_ds_zaturnnah.jpg

For context:

The character is Zsa Zsa Zaturnnah, an affectionate parody of Darna (The Philippines' most famous "female" superhero) and the alter-ego of Ada, a gay hairdresser struggling to make a decent buck. Her outfit is designed to expose as much skin as possible since she was originally intended to be the new source of income for Ada (sexiness plus hairdressing = profit). It just so happens that her costume looks like that of a superhero's*.

I would just like to imagine the mental gymnastics they'd go through in redesigning her. She's the alter-ego of a poor, gay POC from a third-world country. Of course, they could just try to separate her and Ada as much as possible and not give any consideration to the story whatsoever but still. It'd be an interesting thing to see.

*At one point in the story she uses her gauntlets to deflect bullets being fired at a crowd and they break. They were just accessories of a costume after all.
"Her headband kind looks like if someone cut off the bottom of one of those muslim things that make you look like a Pac Man ghost, so we made it cover her entire face since practically a superhero would want to cover her identity."
 
"Her headband kind looks like if someone cut off the bottom of one of those muslim things that make you look like a Pac Man ghost, so we made it cover her entire face since practically a superhero would want to cover her identity."
And it doesn't cover the rest of her body. Maybe they might look into the pre-colonial clothing of Filipinos. They would no doubt use something such as this. One thing I should of noted earlier, trying to look up info via Wikipedia and TV Tropes, the main character had a crappy life (daddy was a homophobe) which SJW's might laud or something since it reinforces their view but they might also hate it since one of the villains of Zaturna is a person known as Queen Femina.
 
And it doesn't cover the rest of her body. Maybe they might look into the pre-colonial clothing of Filipinos. They would no doubt use something such as this. One thing I should of noted earlier, trying to look up info via Wikipedia and TV Tropes, the main character had a crappy life (daddy was a homophobe) which SJW's might laud or something since it reinforces their view but they might also hate it since one of the villains of Zaturna is a person known as Queen Femina.
They might conflicted on Queen Femina. On the one hand, she lead the revolt against the males of her race (who, in the comic, were explicitly stated to have turned the female population into slaves since they envied their privileges as females) and succeeded in eliminating every last one of them; and plans to do the same to every other man in the known universe.

On the other hand, her battle outfit is even more scandalous than Zsa Zsa's (and Zsa Zsa even points this out, saying "Nag-damit ka pa" or, roughly, "Why'd you bother wearing clothes at all?"). So yes, they might be unsure on how to react to Queen Femina.
 
They might conflicted on Queen Femina. On the one hand, she lead the revolt against the males of her race (who, in the comic, were explicitly stated to have turned the female population into slaves since they envied their privileges as females) and succeeded in eliminating every last one of them; and plans to do the same to every other man in the known universe.

On the other hand, her battle outfit is even more scandalous than Zsa Zsa's (and Zsa Zsa even points this out, saying "Nag-damit ka pa" or, roughly, "Why'd you bother wearing clothes at all?"). So yes, they might be unsure on how to react to Queen Femina.
Considering Femina, they may as well focus on redesigning her then if the heroine points out the battle outfit of the villain being more scandalous than her own.
 
The logic goes that magical girl shows are inherently feminist because they have primarily female casts in positions of power, and are written for little girls to have a diverse set of role models. Any critical thinking about an individual show is not necessary, because all magical girl shows are feminist, and all for the same reasons that can be regurgitated verbatim.

I believe this line of thinking was birthed from weeb feminists who were still obsessed with Sailor Moon and trying very, very hard to uphold it as the greatest thing since sliced bread. While this demographic's love for that show is not unjustified - it was written by a woman, genuinely has diverse characters, and includes plentiful LGBT representation - most other magical girl shows really have no leg to stand on in regards to social issues, exposing these "feminists" as womanchildren in denial.

In fact, the subject of adoration in the post above is among the most egregious examples. Madoka Magica was explicitly written for the adult male periphery audience (think bronies), featuring a cast of teen girls with very flat personalities that constantly act like kicked puppies because the poor little waifus can't do anything for themselves. The creator is male and evidently incapable of writing women as people. It's exactly the opposite of what they want, but it's dark and edgy and has pretty colors, and that's really all that matters.
So, they're like icky gross neckbeards but it's okay because feminism!!
 
Back