I wanted to cover the entire series. That's only the name of the first novel and I don't know whether the second season is still using the Melancholy title (I doubt it)
Stemmed from this. Decided to move the conversation here. Hopefully, will get Haruhi fans into the thread. I was going to revive Sym's thread, but felt this was more fitting as an all purpose thread.
As long as you don't stop me from slapping the shit out of her this time, it'd be worth it.
I used that smiley because I am failry(get it? failry) ignorant on homing modes. Cheating doesn't bother me unless I lose because of it.
He betrayed us and ventured into the Outer Realm(GDF).
Last edited by StyleTime on Aug 25th, 2010 at 07:34 PM
I'm not sure if slapping the shit out of her is a good idea. Stopping her from doing things like the computer club stuff is one thing, but pulling a "Did you just punch out cthulu?" Might have disastrous consequenses. Kyon was able to stop her from molesting Mikuru without resorting to violence.
The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya /Suzumiya Haruhi No Yuutsu.
It's a very nice anime show! and the second season will be aired i think in july=D I'm a huge fan of it and I love Haruhi and Yuki!
So... Endless Eight. Yeah. Huh. I actually think it was a clever idea to spread the timeloop across multiple episodes. They took it way too far, like crazy far. If you watch them back to back it's longer than Groundhog Day and the plot never moves forward.
I mean one of the things I enjoyed about the first series was that each episode could just about have come from a different show. The characters are tossed into very different sorts of experiences, so we got to see different sides of the personalities and see them develop over time.
I don't even remember what the other episodes were about in the second season anymore!
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Graffiti outside Latin class.
Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
A juvenal prank.
Wouldn't mind the show but I hate the character that the show is named after.
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"The Daemon lied with every breath. It could not help itself but to deceive and dismay, to riddle and ruin. The more we conversed, the closer I drew to one singularly ineluctable fact: I would gain no wisdom here."