Thread:Panzysoldat/@comment-31330278-20190725214555/@comment-31330278-20190916235629

1. "Villains Rap Battles"'s page is out:

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:ScaryMovie53/Villains_Rap_Battles

Episode 1 is on its way. I promised to a pen-mate that the first episode will feature Thanos vs King Ghidorah. What do you say?

2. Beth is the most repulsive, but Jill and Roman are still more vile. Roman and Jill are still (slightly) more vile, or at least no better. Roman is more vile because of how deep his hatred goes. Sometimes, hating someone because he was born makes a certain villain worse than a villain who just want you dead for mundane selfish reasons. Jill is more vile because of her villainous potential and vision (she could've become Sofia Lamb, while Beth will either stay a serial killer or get back to life, believing she proved herself), the scale of betrayal (Jill had many people who truly loved her, while Beth only had one true friend, and i doubt her parents care about her too much) and washing people's mind completely (Beth succeeded to an extent). Think of Beth as Dolores Umbridge and Jill and Roman as Lord Voldemort. If we assume Jamal is less evil than Debbie (not all will agree), the villainy chart goes like this, from most vile to least vile: Jill, Roman, Beth/Piper/Kieran, Hook Man, Stu, Billy, Mickey, Charlie, Debbie, Jamal.

3. How about BBC version? Did you liked this version of "Robin Hood"? It's up to debate whether it's better than the movie or not, but it was nice enough.

4. Until you do watch them, Here's a FT13 topic: If you did a reboot, how this reboot would look like?

5. Obvious isn't always a bad thing. The haters will hate, but Tyler was the best choice for the lead character. I really doubt there's something realistic behind people like Bryce and Monty. There are real pure evil people in our world, and even if their motives make sense, I just can see why they are realistic. I feel that forcing a mystery instead of choosing Tyler is like in season 6 of "Game Of Throne", where Yara Greyjoy was almost elected as a leader, until her psychopathic uncle came out of the crowd and lowed her to the floor and taking the throne using the inherit chauvinism of the series.