Ryujin
Legend
An understandable reaction. Sorry.Not hallucinations, please. Because then you are setting up recognizable mental illness as the villain, which is problematic.
An understandable reaction. Sorry.Not hallucinations, please. Because then you are setting up recognizable mental illness as the villain, which is problematic.
I know, right? If they would just shut up for a minute and let me get some work done on my campaign...But that doesn't explain why the voices in my head keep talking to me even when they don't want something...![]()
What stuck me particularly was how extremely obviously stupid it was, that was what made it so disappointing as a villain motivation. It broke the sort of immersion of the story because it immediately made me start thinking about how ill-educated and/or irrational Thanos would have to be to believe that, and then, when none of these "genius" characters attempted to point this out to him (you'd have thought someone hard-nosed like Tony Stark would have at a dead minimum), it becomes obvious it's the writers who are ill-educated, and suddenly you're thinking about the writers and the writing and the movie stops working.Yeah, flat cutting the population, or increasing the resource size, was silly.
Or how they would be able to develop more sustainable methods in the first place, at any reasonable pace, since half the world's research & development teams, half their funding, and half the environmental experts and engineers just died instantly.I think his reasoning was the "snap" would be a soft-reset to give others the chance to live more sustainably. If in a hundred years they failed again, he'd just snap again (or double-snap to be extra punishing).
Of course, not sure how the rest of the universe would know what was going on...
Or how they would be able to develop more sustainable methods in the first place, at any reasonable pace, since half the world's research & development teams, half their funding, and half the environmental experts and engineers just died instantly.
Which doesn't suddenly change of there's twice as much stuff laying around to acquire, because no one owns it anymore.I dont think the questions of sustainability are exactly difficult. We just choose the wrong answers because we are greedy, shortsighted and selfish as a species.
On the other hand, the ones who had developed decent sustainability methods got snapped right along with everyone else, so it doesn't seem like he was thinking about solutions beyond the immediate.I think his reasoning was the "snap" would be a soft-reset to give others the chance to live more sustainably. If in a hundred years they failed again, he'd just snap again (or double-snap to be extra punishing).
Of course, not sure how the rest of the universe would know what was going on...
They're not exactly simple, either....and we also choose the wrong answers because they're easy, or because we lack understanding.I dont think the questions of sustainability are exactly difficult. We just choose the wrong answers because we are greedy, shortsighted and selfish as a species.