Fun fact: Jones is another reference to the comics, where Donald lives in a house. He has a neighbor, Jones, who's really there just to add more pain and suffering into his life by being annoying.
Della's "Back on the moon" catchphrase is a reference to sitcom characters recalling old memories and -isms from their humble homelands. Y'know, like every character Debby Ryan ever played.
Yes, the ending was not supposed to be a hard fight. You are supposed to finish it. Blocking it behind a skill barrier that makes casual players unable to finish it would not have been a good choice for this game as it wants you to complete the story.
The stories involving Goldie in the Don Rosa "Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck" series of comics are nothing short of amazing. Tuomas Holopainen, of Nightwish fame, wrote a whole album based on those comics and my personal favourite song from that album, The Last Sled, makes specific reference to those. The entire album is great btw
5:51 Well, for starters, take in to account that Wartwood didn’t just have a low opinion of Anne at the time, the literally believed she a carnivorous monster.
I can usually understand Tony Anselmo's Donald well enough unless the entire point of the joke is not understanding him. The original Clarence Nash Donald is another story.
There's something very tragic to me in how Flowey, even after everything...still suggests just living on the surface. All he wants, after all this time, after everything he's done...Is just to live on the surface with his sibling as himself.
I know I'm late here but I just got recommended your videos and I LOVE them so far! Just wanted to add another theme/reading of this season in addition to the trans/nonbinary allegory is that the systemic disenfranchisement that Lake faces with the rules of the train also parallel experiences of indigenous people in the US. Jesse and his family are indigenous and there are only little clues in the series that confirm this because they weren't allowed to be explicit about his identity in the show (which is god-tier irony), so they're essentially doing the same thing they do in season three: Season three has a heavy racism allegory, but while Grace primes the viewer to consider that, she is not the target of the racism. In this season, Jesse's indigenous identity is meant to prime the viewer on the particular legal barriers and dehumanization that indigenous people face while having Lake be the one actually experiencing it. Anyway, love your thoughtful reactions and commentary and I can't wait to watch more!