Picture this…. Driving to work, coffee in one hand..listen to Rusty Cheeseknife going into depth about your favorite digimon media. Perfect start to the morning.
What a RIDICULOUSLY in-depth, educational, and insightful analysis of a single episode of Digimon Tamers. Nobody else would pull this amount of meat out of an entire series let alone a single episode.
Look what Guilmon, Renamon and Gargo down to the parking lot, they completely destroyed people's cars, an expensive cost any hundred and thounsand dollars replace damage.
If we think about the Id, Ego and Superego, Ruki is Id because she’s hotheaded and always looking for a fight. Jen is the Superego because he thinks calmly and rational (or at least tries to), he’s so far the only Tamer that has a solid relationship with his partner for the most part too. Takato is the Ego, as you say, he wants to be a great tamer like Ruki. But like Jen, has the responsibility of looking after the child Digimon Guilmon reining him in. This, however is different for the Digimon themselves and how they contrast with their partners. Guilmon is the Id because he is the youngest of the three main Digimon and has the most destructive powers. And because of his childish mind, Guilmon is the most impulsive and charges into battle when he instincts gets the better of him. Renamon is the Superego. Mentally speaking, Renamon is the oldest, most levelheaded and wisest of the trio partner Digimon. This is a good thing to balance out Ruki’s brashness throughout the early stages of Tamers. Terriermon is the Ego, mainly because while he is experienced too and already has a good relationship with Henry, he too has a childlike mind at times. And as we see in this episode, just like any Digimon or Humon, even the tiniest power trip is enough to make us go mad.
I'd like to hear your thoughts on the D-Repear, i think it truly lives up to franchise's titular name "Digital Monster". D-Reaper is such a terrifying villain because its just a simple program that identifies&deletes extraneous data. Just like how Apocalymon represented stagnation®ression, the Inverse of the children that represented personal growth&evolution. D-Reaper represented the opposite of Digimon. As in, unlike Digimon, D-Reaper is an A.I without a consciousness, it observes,learns&even imitates human speech only to aid its singular purpose of deletion.
Another reason Henri doesn’t want to fight in general at first is because he once hurt a random neighborhood kid to show off his fighting abilities. After that he became afraid of his own power and that he would hurt someone else like his little sister for example
@@zemox2534 it was something he mentioned in one of the episodes of the D reaper arc. However in the Japanese version he did hit his sister out of the frustration of telling her constantly to stay out of danger
Yes, the association with girly stuff grates on her. The reason I pointed out the "queen" part is due her reaction to the people on the street and her response to being crowned "queen" of the tournament later on in Episode 06. She doesn't like it and I believe its due the fact that the image she was pushing was not supposed to be a feminine one.
@@whattheegad Be warned before buying the game that it's 70% visual novel and only 30% gameplay. So if you don't like reading it might not be for you. Also there are 3 different endings with 1 true ending you can only get after beating the game once.
It doesn't get dark enough to be honest. Survive's heavy subject matter only goes so deep, almost as if it's using horror elements for the mere sake of having a dark Digimon game but never delivering in a meaningful way like Tamers
It’s simple. Rika is tomboyish like my sister. They’re still girls and know that they are but they’re not into the girly girly thing. A tomboyish girl doesn’t mean they want to be a boy. Might want to re-edit that part
@@miraclecomics She is acting out because of how her mother treats her and because she is subconsciously supplementing for her lack of a father figure.