Thread:Abbykurle/@comment-37352765-20190513055049

Well, obviously you remember that Xain kid from my Fallen Queens fanfic, right? Well, your juxtaposition to see this kid's actions as incredibly violent, graphic, and his outright sadistic personality as outrageous and overkill is warranted, and such is why I agreed with you on once I showed it to you.

AND THEN I REMEMBERED THAT THE MOTHER SERIES EXISTED.

Mother, or what we silly Americans call Earthbound Beginnings debuted on the Japanese Super Family Computer (SNES) in 1989. While not important, its sequel Earthbound, releasing in 1994, most certainly was.

The video game stars a young boy named Ness, who is destined to save the world from the evil Giygas, the ultimate embodiment of hatred and chaos incarnate. While he and his 3 friends go on this quest, they interrupted by one Porkey Minch. Porkey acted as a secondary antagonist throughout half of the game, until this quote from the wikipedia article speaks for itself.



Yeah, turns out he'd been working for Giygas the whole time, and after Ness and his friends, Paula, Poo, and Jeff have sent their souls back in time (long story) to stop Giygas, Porkey is standing by his side, cackling maddeningly until Ness and his friends kill themselves to stop Giygas and he slurs at Ness viciously while he saves the universe. Oh yeah, here's 2 pics of Giygas btw.



After Giygas was erased, Porkey travelled back through time, reached Earth, and became a ruthless dictator, doing endless more sorts of evil crap, even kidnapping Claus, brother of the new protagonist Lucas in Mother 3. Porkey would use the now brainwashed Claus to torture Lucas, all to stop Lucas from pulling the Seven Needles (long story) and returning the world to a prosperous state. (Even though this actually awakens a massive dragon who murders absolutely everything)

While the actions of Xain Isaac Pentach seem overkill for children, just know that everything it just listed is in two offical Nintendo owned E10 rated games.

Just sayin.

Have a good day. 