We must ban the Internet from those clowns who surely don't even know how to hold a guitar xd. Beyond not liking some opening, there are many ridiculous and meaningless scores.
The Shinsengumi was a group of swordsmen who worked for the Shogunate during the Meiji revolution. They’re in a lot anime set around the bakumatsu period e.g. Rurouni Kenshin
One thing is a banger and another is a whole ost, My Hero has bangers but the rest of the songs on the soundtracks are just ok. Mentioning Giorno's theme, part 5 is one of the weakest if we compare it with the soundtracks from part 2 to 3, it's not that it's bad, the others are just a little more memorable for being a little more varied, especially in instruments. Another problem with the video is that it doesn't feature Cowboy Bebop, which is precisely what everyone praises the soundtrack for xd. Naruto and Bocchi are missing too, also Saint Seiya, but that Kuma must be very young, it's rare that he puts stuff from the 80s or 90s in his videos, so he misses a lot. Of those he posted, I guess I'll stick with Code Geass, he chose quite a few weird songs for each series, but there were better ones.
after watching the s2 ending s1 hit harder , this is the reason lu guang kept saying follow my lead do as i say , and forced him to do somethings which seemed off
Just in case you still want clarification on "The mirror always shows you your own reflection." While that might also be a line from a movie (or several) I believe its origin goes back at least most of a century and possibly more, coming out of a party game mostly played by teenage girls on sleepovers. The idea is to summon a ghost by first getting exhausted and then staring at your reflection in a darkened room, maybe while chanting, for about a quarter of an hour. (It might take longer, but under two hours will work for almost anyone.) Most people aren't aware of it, but the brief neurochemical fatigue that leads to seeing afterimages can do approximately the same thing at less obvious layers of your perceptual filtering. In other words, if you're tired to start with and your eyes are already straining a bit to see, fixedly staring at an image of yourself eventually tires out minute parts of the process that tells you "what you are looking at is your own face" and at some point you'll get a very distinct sensation that the mirror is no longer showing you your own reflection and you are now looking at the face of a stranger. Being a pretty reliable way to produce an experience unfamiliar and disturbing to most teenagers having it, this little experiment has been enough of a hit over generations to preserve itself in slumber party folklore.
Story mode was literally the reason OW2 exists. It was advertised we'd be getting a fully story mode, but 6 months after OW2 released they said they scrapped it before launch. It pissed a lot of people off.
The line "Those who parade their virtues often do the most evil. We are not like them." refers to how people like Tartuffe pretend to do good while committing their fowl deeds. The Fatui in general and House of the Hearth in specific don't offer any such false pretense. Their actions are left for others to judge without disingenuous guise. Whether Arlecchino and her subordinates are better or worse is up for debate, but at least they don't pretend.