Steve Rogers wrote:loverboy_ wrote:Διάστημα wrote:
Light side: we died alongside our heroes . . . we’re practically one of them . . . (Ecks dee not me. I didn’t die. I explode laugh and dab when I see tony die in theater while almost everyone else in the theater just silently cried and died inside along with him).
Heh I also wasn’t sad. I never once cared about Tony Stank.
See I did and then I watched Civil War when he was going to kill Bucky and take Steve out as collateral damage and I was like "Eh, I don't think I like you." I was really only sad for Peter and Morgan because they lost their father figure
I’ve never felt any sadness for these kind of things. My view on what Mr. Stark did: Well, yeah. I kind of understand that. Sometimes, after a lot of tension (the civil war and stuff), you tend to forget about your surroundings and focus on the battle (especially the winning part for Stark). This can cause you to aim for the kill, and do so without thinking. This is because of his mindset to win. Of course he would say later that he believes winning was not the most important thing, he still acted upon that matter during the battles. Why? Because the thrill of the battle distracts him and the habit to win kicks in.
Even if he did that, I don’t dislike characters for their actions, because, I don’t know. It’s hard to explain. It’s just one of those things where you can explain it to yourself, but you can’t put it into words. Anyway, others would call me insane (I could set up a debate on how Thanos is not a true villain).
This is going to sound really sucky, but Ironman is the character I have the most in common with. /(e-e)\ Yep. I have things in common with the same person I fortnite danced to their death (can we get an F (for fortnite. Who else would it be for?)). I’m not going to go into detail unless on request because although I love writing (why my posts are ridiculously long), my fingers need a break (hehe I’m on mobile RIP)so catch ya later!