Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-31330278-20190813233236/@comment-31330278-20191213225341

BOT: Here's Lucas Baker's proposal. He's worse than Marko Hoxha. He's approximately as vile as Wesker, but not as entertaining.

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Markim99/PE_Proposal:_Lucas_Baker

The fact he stayed just the same homicidal creep (for the record: He's the black sheep of a family of rabid wolves) after being infected is a scary throwback to one of my conversations about Charlize Bridger. I told to my friend that maybe Charlize was brainwashed, and the friend said "she was brainwashed for a long time now". As far as you know Eveline, do you think she's terrified from the fact Lucas gone horribly right?

1. A dark series you might like is "The Loudest Voice", featuring Russel Crowe as Roger Ailes the super-sleazy Fox News former CEO, and Naomi Watts as Gretchen Carlson the reporter. Ailes is a scary man even in Alastor's standards. A well-known sexual offender who got slack because his workers saw him as a money machine. I like how the good people casted Crowe for Ailes' job. It really shows the transformation from a brave gladiator to a wretched emperor. I choose to believe Ailes used to be a brave and visionary man before he became a psychopath. He's similar to a worse version of Katie, so maybe Katie used to be a good girl before becoming the spider glory hound we know. What ware the odds that someone like Ailes will appear in future episodes of "Hazbin Hotel"? I mean, someone without any affable qualities who wish to bring down the hotel for the same reason the canon Ailes turned Fox News to a rightwing semi-recruited media.

2. Recently i'm thinking of proposing Mannoroth. If you told me that Beth is based on this creature, I wouldn't be too surprised. Just like Beth, Mannoroth is a person of death and destruction who's motivated largely by sadism. Chances are he's also racist, as he see any mortal as a useful idiot at best and as a future cannon fodder at worst. However, while Beth had a petty motive (proving herself she's the ultimate serial killer), Mannoroth just wanted to kill as many sentient beings possible in as many worlds as possible. If there was no mortal around him at a precise moment, he would kill some of his demon brethren because he's bored. Unlike some other demons, Mannoroth have a clear moral agency and have a separate agenda from his bosses Archimonde and Kil'jaeden. His bosses wanted to take over Azeroth for the legion. Mannoroth just wanted to destroy everything and everyone. His sadism is shown by more than just killing everybody. His prime achievement was giving his blood for corrupting the orcs into the jihadist horde they were for a long time. Gul'dan was the ideas man, but Mannoroth laid the foundations for the corruption. His presence alone was a great motivation for many of the orcs to drink his blood. Even Gul'dan was terrified. For a good reason. In "Warcraft 3", Mannoroth got Grom drinking his blood for the second time (Grom already struggled against the poison running in his vain for his entire life), killing Cenarius (and as a result, creating an hostility between the orcs and the night elves) and get in a fight with Thrall. Grom was his magnum opus and favorite punching bag, as seen when he drove tones of sick delight from tormenting him, estranging him from his friends (such as Thrall) and calling him "the same as me" (for further details of how Grom felt about the last comment, check "your approval fills me with shame" on TV Tropes). Considering Mannoroth was deadly even after his death with the postmortem explosion that killed Grom in the original timeline, hurting others and abusing Grom was more important to him even than his own life. He could get away with everything, if only he kept his mouth shut, but he was willing to get killed just to insult Grom one last time. You would think being the reason Grom became a villain in the first place would be enough for him, but no. The fact Grom was the first to drink from his blood makes him even worse, because only a complete psychopath would abuse his magnum opus, especially if the said magnus opus was the first to walk in his way. When I think of it deeply, Mannoroth is a demonic Palpatine, and Grom became an orc Darth Vader thanks to the former.

3. You just gave me an idea for a way to redeem Bane. His drug addiction and being a muscles mountain makes him similar to Grom, and as mentioned in topic 2, Bane can kill his PE drug dealer. I like your idea :-). What are the chances that your idea will become an official canon?, also, while me and you see Scarecrow's tragic versions as enjoyable, I believe many people prefers him as pure evil because he's a symbol to humanity's biggest fears. The bogyman architype. I disagree with this state of mine, but it's more understandable than some other misconceptions.

4. Today I got a new possible ideas in regard to creating children. It's the beginning of an adoption agency based on prehistoric babies. The founder established a complicated network of traveling back in time to the stone age, kidnap prehistoric babies and sell them to desperate couples who want kids. The hero will be one of the prehistoric homo sapience whose babies (he had more than one kid, and more than one of his kids was abducted) were abducted. He'll find out the rift in time, follow the cruel adoption agency people and stop only by death for getting his babies back. You can think of him as similar to Clyde Shelton. His mentor, who'll be his tribe's elder leader (a shaman who came to call the shots after shooting his former boss with an arrow), will be the secondary antagonist. The elder shaman's vision is to unite the tribes around him, invade to modern times and engage war against the adoption agency. He tell his people that he wants to retrieve their children, but he secretly plan to increase his influence circle using modern weaponry. He saw the CEO (the main antagonist), got impressed by his techniques and increased his already insatiable hunger for power. In that aspect, he's similar to Lord Cotys. I have many other ideas to publish before that, but that's the beginning of the premise. What do you say?