This realization caused me to lose it a bit at first. I felt emptied out in the same way I did after bittersweet finales from games like Shadow of the Colossus and Final Fantasy X before. These were games that filled the vacuum of childhood free time with escapism, but also structure, objectives, and familiarity. I put a lot of myself perhaps too much into vicarious, fantastical stories.
When those stories ended, I cried. I got quiet. I tried to force myself to find some other pillar on which my day-to-day life could lean. But the more I thought about it, the more I realized Persona 3 specifically told me not to do that. During the conclusion, the protagonist a mostly silent tool that let me embody my vision of that virtual school life lies in the arms of a teammate who helped him save the world.
In the distance, you can hear the rest of his close-knit squad rushing to see him, having just recalled his existence after their memories had been wiped by the final boss. Instead, he just peacefully drifts away in calm acceptance after being assured that, yes, he has impacted those friends and their lives.
Growing up and now continuing to live in a college town, my own friendships have been fleeting. Those I grew up with have mostly moved on. Those I met later went back to where they came from. I've heard others talk about lifelong friends they've known since grade school.
My mom, for instance, still vacations with her childhood neighbor every year. By contrast, I hear my oldest childhood friend lives in New York these days. The kid who lived across the street from me, who used to play "ditch" with me and my brother it's, uh, like hide-and-seek but at night , got a job in California.
My besty throughout high school and college, who introduced me to my favorite authors and dated my first girlfriend's best friend Minako was impressed with the storytelling as it was better than usual than she would have expected. A villain that is fleshed out well? You don't get that too often in a big spectacle movie. He prefered a black and white story, not a White and Grey Morality tale. In real life, remember that quite a lot of people are either forced into it or are misguided.
The two went to the local fast-food burger joint, Wild-Duck. If it weren't for the copious amount of French food that I got, my stomach would rebel tonight. Though with that drink The guys at school might say some stuff if they see us together. And heck I bet there are a lot of girls wanting to get in the dorm to be close to Akihiko-senpai. I can really understand how they feel. First off, it's a co-ed dorm and ontop of that, all the girls are cute. They just can't make themselves be nice to a guy who has things that good.
Moving around a lot geared me towards not expecting to stay the next semester. Plus, I want to find someone who I can trust because of He seems so happy-go-lucky. Is this about his resentment towards me? Or is it something else If you have one in your room, you should be able to connect. Oh right! Showa day is tomorrow. Golden week is on. That means we get Monday and Tuesday off as well. Well if nothing comes up I'll go to the bookstore.
But tonight's a night I can work at the Coffee shop. A Ganesha bank! Which is not as cool as the Jack Frost doll but if it keeps my skills up, then I am all for it. All money I receive is good money. Good thing I get the bulk of mine from a certain tower.
Junpei and Minako went to Watsuku restaurant to eat out for lunch. Don't have an account? Sign up for free! What do you need help on? Cancel X. Topic Archived. Sign Up for free or Log In if you already have an account to be able to post messages, change how messages are displayed, and view media in posts. User Info: onlinenow Does one of the answers start with an N?
Mainly because that is a re-hash of the old P3 Vanilla guide. Questions in P3:FES have been swapped around and have new ones sprinkled in like mad. Answer to that one is Nara. Making a listing of all questions as I play through the game. Might get around to posting it. User Info: LaughingManZero.
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