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Which shonen anime attack would you use to beat walt disney


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#1 Rambly

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:30 PM

the premise of the thread is simple. if walt disney came back to life from his cryogenic sleep, what attack or power would you use to defeat his ass and put him back into the ground?
 
i believe i already touched upon my feelings on the subject elsewhere:

i would personally defeat his ass with an attack similar to the hokuto hyakuretsu ken, the "hundred crack fist"


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#2 Aslion

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:36 PM

my first instinct was big mom's ability to rip his soul out of his living body but i'm not quite sure he'd have one?


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#3 Rambly

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:42 PM

who's big mom


leJZCgt.png


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#4 Aslion

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:44 PM

Charlotte Linlin,[17] better known as Big Mom,[18] is the captain of the Big Mom Pirates[5] and one of the Four Emperors ruling over the New World, as the only female member.[19][1] She is the matriarch of the very large Charlotte Family,[4] whose many children make up the infrastructure of her crew.[20]

She also rules over Totto Land as its queen,[5] seeking to form it into a utopia where all the world's races can live together in peace without discrimination or segregation.[21] In her childhood, Linlin was raised in the Sheep's House under Carmel, whose Devil Fruit power she eventually inherited, before co-founding her own pirate crew with Streusen following Carmel's death.[22] She's also the creator of the unique race of creatures known as Homies, who mainly inhabit all of Totto Land, and happily serve her.


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#5 Rambly

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:45 PM

ho;ly shit i didnt ask for your fucking life story bitch i just wanted to know what show she was from jesus christ


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#6 Aslion

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:46 PM

onew piece


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#7 Rambly

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:46 PM

like imagine if i just posted
Batman: The Animated Series is an American superhero animated television series based on the DC Comics superhero Batman. Developed by Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, and Mitch Brian, and produced by Warner Bros. Animation, it originally aired on Fox Kids from September 5, 1992, to September 15, 1995, with a total of 85 episodes.%5B1%5D%5B2%5D For the final 20 episodes, the series was given the on-screen title The Adventures of Batman & Robin, which was also used for reruns of earlier episodes. The series became the first in the continuity of the shared DC Animated Universe, spawning further animated TV series, feature films, comic books and video games with most of the same creative talent.%5B3%5D
The series was praised for its thematic complexity, film noir aesthetics, darker tone, artistic presentation, and modernization of its title character's crime-fighting origins.%5B4%5DIGN.com listed Batman: The Animated Series as the best adaptation of Batman anywhere outside of comics, the best comic book television show of all time%5B5%5D and the second-best animated series of all time (after The Simpsons).%5B6%5D%5B7%5DWizard magazine also ranked it No. 2 of the greatest animated television shows of all time (again after The Simpsons). TV Guide ranked it the seventh-greatest cartoon of all time.%5B8%5D The widespread acclaim led the series to win four Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Animated Program.%5B9%5D%5B10%5D
A continuation of the series is in development in the form of an audio podcast drama, with the cast returning along with writer Alan Burnett.%5B11%5D



Contents

Overview
The series took influence from Tim Burton's live-action films, Batman (1989) and Batman Returns (1992), and the acclaimed Superman theatrical cartoons produced by Fleischer Studios in the early 1940s.%5B12%5D In designing the series, Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski emulated the Burton films' "otherworldly timelessness" (however the series is clearly set in the 20th century, but using various elements from different decades of that century), incorporating period features such as black-and-white title cards, police airships (although no such thing existed, Timm has stated that he found it to fit the show's style) and a "vintage" color scheme with film noir flourishes.%5B13%5D
The visual style of the series was based on the artwork of Radomski, and the gothic look of Gotham City was derived from his initial designs.%5B14%5D In addition, Radomski issued a standing order to the animation department that all backgrounds be painted using light colors on black paper (as opposed to the industry standard of dark colors on white paper).%5B13%5D The distinctive visual combination of "noir" imagery and Art Deco design was dubbed "Dark Deco" by the producers.%5B15%5D
The series initially took a variation of music written by Danny Elfman for the Burton films as its theme; later episodes of the series used a new theme with a similar style by Shirley Walker (Walker was occasionally Elfman's conductor for films). The score of the series was influenced by Elfman's work on the Burton films, as well as music of 1940s film noir.%5B16%5D
The series is more adult-oriented than many of the previous superhero cartoons, while still being considered kid-friendly appropriate for younger audiences. It depicts outright physical violence against antagonists, including realistic firearms (though only one character, Commissioner Gordon, was ever depicted as having been shot, in the episode "I Am the Night"). First-time producers Timm and Radomski reportedly encountered resistance from studio executives, but the success of Burton's first film allowed the embryonic series to survive long enough to produce a pilot episode, "On Leather Wings", which, according to Timm, "got a lot of people off our backs".%5B13%5D During the series' production, producer Alan Burnett wrote a silent episode (without dialogue) entitled "Silent Night" to explore more of Batman's sexual life, but this was never produced. Burnett also intended to make an episode featuring a female vampire that would bite Batman to suck his blood, but plans never materialized.%5B17%5D
The series is also notable for its supporting cast—numerous known actors provided voices for a variety of recognizable villains, most notably Mark Hamill (previously famous for his role as Luke Skywalker in the original Star Wars trilogy) whose prominence as a voice actor was heightened through his "cheerfully deranged" portrayal of the Joker.%5B18%5D The role was originally given to Tim Curry, but he developed bronchitis during the initial recording sessions.%5B19%5DJohn Glover, who later voiced the Rid



#8 Aslion

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:50 PM

like imagine if i just posted
Batman: The Animated Series is an American superhero animated television series based on the DC Comics superhero Batman. Developed by Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, and Mitch Brian, and produced by Warner Bros. Animation, it originally aired on Fox Kids from September 5, 1992, to September 15, 1995, with a total of 85 episodes.%5B1%5D%5B2%5D For the final 20 episodes, the series was given the on-screen title The Adventures of Batman & Robin, which was also used for reruns of earlier episodes. The series became the first in the continuity of the shared DC Animated Universe, spawning further animated TV series, feature films, comic books and video games with most of the same creative talent.%5B3%5D
The series was praised for its thematic complexity, film noir aesthetics, darker tone, artistic presentation, and modernization of its title character's crime-fighting origins.%5B4%5DIGN.com listed Batman: The Animated Series as the best adaptation of Batman anywhere outside of comics, the best comic book television show of all time%5B5%5D and the second-best animated series of all time (after The Simpsons).%5B6%5D%5B7%5DWizard magazine also ranked it No. 2 of the greatest animated television shows of all time (again after The Simpsons). TV Guide ranked it the seventh-greatest cartoon of all time.%5B8%5D The widespread acclaim led the series to win four Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Animated Program.%5B9%5D%5B10%5D
A continuation of the series is in development in the form of an audio podcast drama, with the cast returning along with writer Alan Burnett.%5B11%5D



Contents

Overview
The series took influence from Tim Burton's live-action films, Batman (1989) and Batman Returns (1992), and the acclaimed Superman theatrical cartoons produced by Fleischer Studios in the early 1940s.%5B12%5D In designing the series, Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski emulated the Burton films' "otherworldly timelessness" (however the series is clearly set in the 20th century, but using various elements from different decades of that century), incorporating period features such as black-and-white title cards, police airships (although no such thing existed, Timm has stated that he found it to fit the show's style) and a "vintage" color scheme with film noir flourishes.%5B13%5D
The visual style of the series was based on the artwork of Radomski, and the gothic look of Gotham City was derived from his initial designs.%5B14%5D In addition, Radomski issued a standing order to the animation department that all backgrounds be painted using light colors on black paper (as opposed to the industry standard of dark colors on white paper).%5B13%5D The distinctive visual combination of "noir" imagery and Art Deco design was dubbed "Dark Deco" by the producers.%5B15%5D
The series initially took a variation of music written by Danny Elfman for the Burton films as its theme; later episodes of the series used a new theme with a similar style by Shirley Walker (Walker was occasionally Elfman's conductor for films). The score of the series was influenced by Elfman's work on the Burton films, as well as music of 1940s film noir.%5B16%5D
The series is more adult-oriented than many of the previous superhero cartoons, while still being considered kid-friendly appropriate for younger audiences. It depicts outright physical violence against antagonists, including realistic firearms (though only one character, Commissioner Gordon, was ever depicted as having been shot, in the episode "I Am the Night"). First-time producers Timm and Radomski reportedly encountered resistance from studio executives, but the success of Burton's first film allowed the embryonic series to survive long enough to produce a pilot episode, "On Leather Wings", which, according to Timm, "got a lot of people off our backs".%5B13%5D During the series' production, producer Alan Burnett wrote a silent episode (without dialogue) entitled "Silent Night" to explore more of Batman's sexual life, but this was never produced. Burnett also intended to make an episode featuring a female vampire that would bite Batman to suck his blood, but plans never materialized.%5B17%5D
The series is also notable for its supporting cast—numerous known actors provided voices for a variety of recognizable villains, most notably Mark Hamill (previously famous for his role as Luke Skywalker in the original Star Wars trilogy) whose prominence as a voice actor was heightened through his "cheerfully deranged" portrayal of the Joker.%5B18%5D The role was originally given to Tim Curry, but he developed bronchitis during the initial recording sessions.%5B19%5DJohn Glover, who later voiced the Rid

thats not a an ime


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#9 Rambly

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:51 PM

its kinda shonen tho? if shonen characters were billionaires and didnt actually have any special pwoers other than stealing peoples money and using it to beat up poor people instead of solving any problems



#10 Aslion

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:56 PM

yeah in spirit there's a lot of similarities but it's more episodic than a typical shonen which is a pretty large distinction i think

 

 

alt post:

poor people ARE the problem



#11 Bagu

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Posted 25 December 2021 - 12:56 PM

He has been frozen, so let's kill him with heat :)


Edited by Bagu, 25 December 2021 - 12:57 PM.

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#12 Moosh

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Posted 26 December 2021 - 08:49 PM

Star Finger. Final answer.



#13 Taco Chopper

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Posted 26 December 2021 - 10:40 PM

ho;ly shit i didnt ask for your fucking life story bitch i just wanted to know what show she was from jesus christ

woah..... what the H**K, this isn't appropriate behaviour. you can't just FUCKING swear on PUREZC in 2021!!!!! you fucking ANIMAL


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#14 Deedee

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Posted 27 December 2021 - 11:54 PM

i gonna do it im gonna say the swear word

MICKEY MOUSE

suddenly, with the ancient curse word uttered, Walt Disney shakes in his boots. A copyright infringement has just been commited in front of his eyes, no Disney Corp to protect his eyes. He withers up and grows 2 additional heads whilst taking flight, becoming his final form: Shitty Minecraft Parodies. Are you a bad enough dude to slay the Wither Disney?



#15 Sheik

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Posted 28 December 2021 - 07:11 AM

light sabers


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