tanithryudo (
tanithryudo) wrote2023-09-05 10:44 am
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Star Rail lore musings oh 饮月君
I know it's still early in the life of the game and there's a whole lot of unknowns to the lore. But we are near the end of the 仙舟罗浮 arc, and I've been reading a lot of fic, spoilers, commentary, and other lore stuff in the build up to the recent release of cute dragon guy, and I have opinions.
Here's what we know in terms of fact:
- The Vidyadhara are a species descended from the Aeon of Permanence (godlike being who is AWOL and presumed dead). There are other draconic species out there who look different and probably have different biology/culture/etc.
- The Vidyadhara are incapable of reproduction, meaning their population numbers can only decrease over time.
- At the end of their expected lifespan, Vidyadhara basically revert to egg state, and are normally "reborn" with no memories of their previous incarnation. It's the same physical body and soul, but different...mental conception of self. (And an interesting case study in nature vs. nurture)
- By Vidyadhara culture and law, the "reborn" individual is considered a separate person from the previous incarnation.
- Most Vidyadhara look human except with pointy ears and no magic powers. Some individuals have draconic features (like horns and/or tail), and these appear to be the governing class. We've seen a Preceptor who has horns.
- Vidyadhara government consists of the high elder at the top, who wields great powers. They are "advised" by a council of Preceptors, which can number anywhere up to the 100s. (It's kind of like the emperor and his court from Imperial China). Internally, there is often a struggle for dominance between the high elder and the Preceptors. Sometimes the high elder is powerful and willful enough to do as he wishes, sometimes the Preceptors have enough pull to de-throne the leader.
- Five of the Xianzhou worldships each have a population of Vidyadhara led by their own high elder and council of Preceptors. The Fanghu appears to have the largest population of Vidyadhara.
- The high elder is supposedly chosen from individuals with draconic features to inherit the power of the previous high elder. This inheritance (call the Transformation Arcanum) also appears to come with a biological makeover, since almost all incarnations of the high elder end up looking the same. It also comes with dreams/fragmented memories related to the previous incarnations.
- The Vidyadhara signed an alliance/pact with the Xianzhou Alliance at some point in the past (thousands of years ago/generations ago). Details are unclear, but part of the agreement seems to be the high elders would help seal/guard the divine plaguemarks on the Xianzhou ships. The plaguemark on the Xianzhou Luofu specifically is the Ambrosial Arbor, guarded by Imbibitor Lunae.
- Dan Feng is the previous Imbibitor Lunae. Technically, Bailu is the current Imbibitor Lunae but hasn't been officially given the title yet. Dan Heng, being the rebirth of Dan Feng, still has half (or more?) of the inheritance of Imbibitor Lunae.
Then the timeline of events:
circa 7300s is probably when the war against Shuhu, Emanator of Abundance, took place. A different General for the Xianzhou Luofu is named here, who probably died in this war.
Year 7379 is when Dan Feng, the previous high elder of the Luofu, attempted to use the Transformation Arcanum to create a new Vidyadhara individual out of the deceased remains of a former comrade (Baiheng, a girl of the Foxian species). It sorta blew up in his face, either creating a chimeric monster or releasing an existing one sealed in the Arbor.
However, it was also successful in creating Bailu (the current high elder in game, though only having the title and none of the political powers or official recognition).
Year 7380 is the video clip where it shows Jing Yuan wielding the Lightning Lord, which signifies the station of Arbiter General. This means it occurs after he became the new General of the Luofu.
His first order of duty after the promotion is to deal with requests from the Vidyadhara Preceptors to hand over Dan Feng to them as they were insufficient to further seal the Arbor.
Somewhere in between, presumably Bailu was born and observed to be the partial inheritor of the high elder. It was stated she was specifically named by Dan Feng to be his successor.
However, the Preceptors at some point found out Bailu did not have the full inheritance of the high elder, and thus why there was a lot of disagreement regarding the final sentencing and punishment of Dan Feng.
Dan Feng was sentenced to molting, ie forced reincarnation. Because the Preceptors feared losing the half of the inheritance that was missing from Bailu, they meddled with the molting process. The effects seems to be aimed at not completely erasing the memories. But the results are...mixed.
After being reborn, Dan Heng spent at least a century or two growing up in jail, depending only on books and fragmented memories for how to be a person. And then he was exiled from the Luofu and hasn't been back til now.
Currently, it is the year 8100 in game.
Is Dan Heng still liable for Dan Feng's sin?
In the story, Dan Heng keeps insisting to the people on the Luofu that he is not Dan Feng. I've seen criticism in many places that this is him trying to escape from his crimes/past and that he is being irresponsible.
Firstly, I gotta say, Dan Feng had already been tried and punished for his crime by the laws of the Luofu. Then, whether or not he agreed with it, Dan Heng further served additional imprisonment. So, legally, there is no "responsibility" or "liability" left.
Obviously, for the immortal citizens of the Luofu who still remember the incident and bear resentment for Dan Feng, they might not feel like it's enough, but that's getting into the realm of vengeance than justice.
As for whether he should be morally culpable, and whether he should feel guilty about it...I guess the other part of this question is, how much of Dan Heng is Dan Feng. What makes a person a particular person? Is it biology? Memory? "Soul"?
If biology, then what about clones? Soul...is so ambiguously defined. If memory... if the transfer of power to Bailu had not been incomplete and she'd gotten the full dump of high elder powers including memories... does that mean she should be held accountable despite being a brand new being?
Dan Heng says he has fragmented memories of past incarnations, and that includes all past incarnations of the high elder and not just Dan Feng. And the memories are more like viewing clips of a movie from outside, rather than experiencing it as if in the other's place.
We don't know enough about Dan Feng's personality to make a comparison. But it is hard to imagine he would be at all similar to Dan Heng given their vastly different upbringing.
Personally, I'm with Dan Heng on this question. Fragmented memories or not, he is a separate consciousness from Dan Feng, and there is a good reason why Vidyadhara culture views rebirth to be a different person.
Did Jing Yuan abuse his authority to exile Dan Heng?
Another accusation I've seen pop up here and there, that Jing Yuan used his position as General of the Luofu on behalf of his friend Dan Feng, resulting in Dan Heng's exile against the best interests of the Luofu.
Admittedly, here we're getting more into the realms of conjecture, deductions, and head-cannon...
But I don't think sentiment moved his actions as much as people think. This is the guy who just recently (year 7380) had to fight and kill his master when she went crazy. He wasn't happy about it, but he knew his duty and performed it.
I don't think he needs to be wholly motivated by sentiment to argue against summary execution of Dan Feng, because he was far from the only one arguing against that punishment.
The high elder of the Xianzhou Yaoqing (I think it was? Or was it the Fanghu, or both?) also disagreed with that punishment. And it's understandable. Dan Feng didn't commit his great sin out of malevolent intent, his was the path to hell on good intentions which also blew up in his face due to further lack of ability. But that means no one, that and means the other high elders of the other Xianzhou ships, can swear that none of their future incarnations wouldn't be capable of making the same mistake. And summarily executing their peer, their fellow leader of the Vidyadhara people, may well introduce doubts in the Alliance. Make them question if it's worth their generations of guardianship of the plaguemarks if the slightest misstep means true death for a normally truly biologically immortal species.
Locally on the Luofu, the Perceptors were also against execution, because they had realized at that point the inheritance of power to Bailu was incomplete. So execution may well mean the loss of that missing power. And, let's face it, power is an intrinsic part of politics. If you want to get realpolitik, losing that power means a loss of standing in the power balance between the Vidyadhara and other species on the Luofu.
Given the important role the Vidyadhara play in the Xianzhou Alliance as a whole then, it's not surprising that the judges decided not to go with execution. Forced molting is essentially death of personality, and supposedly amounts to the same thing in the frame of Vidyadhara culture anyway.
Now, what is surprising is that they kept Dan Heng in jail afterwards, despite the fact that legally and culturally, he is supposed to be viewed as a new person. Most likely, at this point, the Luofu government had discovered the Preceptors had tampered with the molting process, and thus were unsure if or how much Dan Heng is still Dan Feng.
So, what about the exile? It's implied that Jing Yuan pushed this through against the wishes of the Vidyadhara Preceptors and against the best interests of the Luofu. The former is certainly true, but is the latter?
The Preceptors wanted Dan Heng to be handed over to them. In the latest companion mission, we also saw what happened when Dan Heng came back to the Luofu. As long as he and Bailu are on the same ship, there are factions among the Vidyadhara which wants one of them to die.
The "conservative" faction wants to keep Bailu as their puppet leader, who has an empty title and no means to resist their decisions. Her maids are spies, and killed (forced reborn) if they start sympathizing with her. Her powers are specifically suppressed the moment she showed the ability to control the elements, so she can't be a physical threat "to the Luofu". So obviously they need Dan Heng to die.
The "radical" faction wants the destructive power that Dan Heng still carries, ostensibly to "make the Vidyadhara great again" (or keep them great, I guess). For them, Bailu is a useless mistake on the path to power.
In other words, handing Dan Heng back to the Vidyadhara may well have sparked a civil war among the Vidyadhara, and could easily have resulted in his death or Bailu's, or even both of them.
As a general reknowned more for stratagem and thinker than as a fighter, I can't imagine that Jing Yuan wouldn't think of this. And if so, it's easy to understand why he did not choose that option.
I guess he could've continued to keep Dan Heng in jail...but for how long? For another lifetime until he rebirths again? An entire lifetime spent in jail for a crime that his previous incarnation already paid for definitely seems "unjust". Not to mention, the average life expectancy of an Xianzhou general is shorter than lifespan left to the younger Dan Heng. So what happens when the next general takes over? It's just pushing the powderkeg further down the line.
From this line of thinking, exile doesn't seem to be a bad option. It prevents certain Vidyadhara from forming factions in their name if one party isn't even there. It forces them to treat Bailu to some modicum of respect because she's all that's left of the high elder inheritance they have on hand.
And then there's the question of: what about the guardianship of the Ambrosial Arbor? Isn't exiling Dan Heng effectively throwing away the keys to your local nuke silo?
But if you really think about it, would the Luofu still be able to trust Dan Heng with the guardianship of the Arbor? Maybe if it was a normal inheritance or even if he grew up a normal Vidyadhara. But Dan Heng was reborn in prison and grew up in prison for a crime he does not remember committing.
Sure, we know he's a moral and surprisingly well-adjusted individual still, on top of plot-protection as part of the player MC's coterie, but the Luofu doesn't have our omniscience. From their POV, can they really trust him to not resent them for he unfair treatment of this incarnation? To actually help instead of destroy if given the chance to use his key on the silo?
Or would it make more sense to keep him as far away from said superweapon as possible, just he in case he wants to act on his resentment, or even if he just slips up (due to having no formal training of his powers this incarnation) and commits another oopsies?
Also, we learn from the latest story missions that, ironically, Bailu is the one that inherited the power to seal the Arbor. Dan Heng only has the power to destroy/open the seal.
In other words, the Luofu actually did have the only part of the inheritance they needed to guard the Ambrosial Arbor. Of course, they also shot themselves in the foot in that by suppressing Bailu's powers from the beginning and not giving her any training in anything other than healing magic.
Of course, Jing Yuan and the other Luofu officials probably didn't know about this particular detail when they decided on the exile. But it is quite the irony that still ended up making the optimal decision from the perspective of the Luofu anyways.
References:
Dan Heng story 1 story 2
Bailu lore
And finally, on another topic, here's the current state of my account:

Currently at equilibrium level 4 (character max level 70). Waiting to raise my world level until I have built enough resources to upgrade the ~4 main damagers close to level 80 (which may take some time).
And then after that, I'll start seriously on the gear grind.
Here's what we know in terms of fact:
- The Vidyadhara are a species descended from the Aeon of Permanence (godlike being who is AWOL and presumed dead). There are other draconic species out there who look different and probably have different biology/culture/etc.
- The Vidyadhara are incapable of reproduction, meaning their population numbers can only decrease over time.
- At the end of their expected lifespan, Vidyadhara basically revert to egg state, and are normally "reborn" with no memories of their previous incarnation. It's the same physical body and soul, but different...mental conception of self. (And an interesting case study in nature vs. nurture)
- By Vidyadhara culture and law, the "reborn" individual is considered a separate person from the previous incarnation.
- Most Vidyadhara look human except with pointy ears and no magic powers. Some individuals have draconic features (like horns and/or tail), and these appear to be the governing class. We've seen a Preceptor who has horns.
- Vidyadhara government consists of the high elder at the top, who wields great powers. They are "advised" by a council of Preceptors, which can number anywhere up to the 100s. (It's kind of like the emperor and his court from Imperial China). Internally, there is often a struggle for dominance between the high elder and the Preceptors. Sometimes the high elder is powerful and willful enough to do as he wishes, sometimes the Preceptors have enough pull to de-throne the leader.
- Five of the Xianzhou worldships each have a population of Vidyadhara led by their own high elder and council of Preceptors. The Fanghu appears to have the largest population of Vidyadhara.
- The high elder is supposedly chosen from individuals with draconic features to inherit the power of the previous high elder. This inheritance (call the Transformation Arcanum) also appears to come with a biological makeover, since almost all incarnations of the high elder end up looking the same. It also comes with dreams/fragmented memories related to the previous incarnations.
- The Vidyadhara signed an alliance/pact with the Xianzhou Alliance at some point in the past (thousands of years ago/generations ago). Details are unclear, but part of the agreement seems to be the high elders would help seal/guard the divine plaguemarks on the Xianzhou ships. The plaguemark on the Xianzhou Luofu specifically is the Ambrosial Arbor, guarded by Imbibitor Lunae.
- Dan Feng is the previous Imbibitor Lunae. Technically, Bailu is the current Imbibitor Lunae but hasn't been officially given the title yet. Dan Heng, being the rebirth of Dan Feng, still has half (or more?) of the inheritance of Imbibitor Lunae.
Then the timeline of events:
circa 7300s is probably when the war against Shuhu, Emanator of Abundance, took place. A different General for the Xianzhou Luofu is named here, who probably died in this war.
Year 7379 is when Dan Feng, the previous high elder of the Luofu, attempted to use the Transformation Arcanum to create a new Vidyadhara individual out of the deceased remains of a former comrade (Baiheng, a girl of the Foxian species). It sorta blew up in his face, either creating a chimeric monster or releasing an existing one sealed in the Arbor.
However, it was also successful in creating Bailu (the current high elder in game, though only having the title and none of the political powers or official recognition).
Year 7380 is the video clip where it shows Jing Yuan wielding the Lightning Lord, which signifies the station of Arbiter General. This means it occurs after he became the new General of the Luofu.
His first order of duty after the promotion is to deal with requests from the Vidyadhara Preceptors to hand over Dan Feng to them as they were insufficient to further seal the Arbor.
Somewhere in between, presumably Bailu was born and observed to be the partial inheritor of the high elder. It was stated she was specifically named by Dan Feng to be his successor.
However, the Preceptors at some point found out Bailu did not have the full inheritance of the high elder, and thus why there was a lot of disagreement regarding the final sentencing and punishment of Dan Feng.
Dan Feng was sentenced to molting, ie forced reincarnation. Because the Preceptors feared losing the half of the inheritance that was missing from Bailu, they meddled with the molting process. The effects seems to be aimed at not completely erasing the memories. But the results are...mixed.
After being reborn, Dan Heng spent at least a century or two growing up in jail, depending only on books and fragmented memories for how to be a person. And then he was exiled from the Luofu and hasn't been back til now.
Currently, it is the year 8100 in game.
Is Dan Heng still liable for Dan Feng's sin?
In the story, Dan Heng keeps insisting to the people on the Luofu that he is not Dan Feng. I've seen criticism in many places that this is him trying to escape from his crimes/past and that he is being irresponsible.
Firstly, I gotta say, Dan Feng had already been tried and punished for his crime by the laws of the Luofu. Then, whether or not he agreed with it, Dan Heng further served additional imprisonment. So, legally, there is no "responsibility" or "liability" left.
Obviously, for the immortal citizens of the Luofu who still remember the incident and bear resentment for Dan Feng, they might not feel like it's enough, but that's getting into the realm of vengeance than justice.
As for whether he should be morally culpable, and whether he should feel guilty about it...I guess the other part of this question is, how much of Dan Heng is Dan Feng. What makes a person a particular person? Is it biology? Memory? "Soul"?
If biology, then what about clones? Soul...is so ambiguously defined. If memory... if the transfer of power to Bailu had not been incomplete and she'd gotten the full dump of high elder powers including memories... does that mean she should be held accountable despite being a brand new being?
Dan Heng says he has fragmented memories of past incarnations, and that includes all past incarnations of the high elder and not just Dan Feng. And the memories are more like viewing clips of a movie from outside, rather than experiencing it as if in the other's place.
We don't know enough about Dan Feng's personality to make a comparison. But it is hard to imagine he would be at all similar to Dan Heng given their vastly different upbringing.
Personally, I'm with Dan Heng on this question. Fragmented memories or not, he is a separate consciousness from Dan Feng, and there is a good reason why Vidyadhara culture views rebirth to be a different person.
Did Jing Yuan abuse his authority to exile Dan Heng?
Another accusation I've seen pop up here and there, that Jing Yuan used his position as General of the Luofu on behalf of his friend Dan Feng, resulting in Dan Heng's exile against the best interests of the Luofu.
Admittedly, here we're getting more into the realms of conjecture, deductions, and head-cannon...
But I don't think sentiment moved his actions as much as people think. This is the guy who just recently (year 7380) had to fight and kill his master when she went crazy. He wasn't happy about it, but he knew his duty and performed it.
I don't think he needs to be wholly motivated by sentiment to argue against summary execution of Dan Feng, because he was far from the only one arguing against that punishment.
The high elder of the Xianzhou Yaoqing (I think it was? Or was it the Fanghu, or both?) also disagreed with that punishment. And it's understandable. Dan Feng didn't commit his great sin out of malevolent intent, his was the path to hell on good intentions which also blew up in his face due to further lack of ability. But that means no one, that and means the other high elders of the other Xianzhou ships, can swear that none of their future incarnations wouldn't be capable of making the same mistake. And summarily executing their peer, their fellow leader of the Vidyadhara people, may well introduce doubts in the Alliance. Make them question if it's worth their generations of guardianship of the plaguemarks if the slightest misstep means true death for a normally truly biologically immortal species.
Locally on the Luofu, the Perceptors were also against execution, because they had realized at that point the inheritance of power to Bailu was incomplete. So execution may well mean the loss of that missing power. And, let's face it, power is an intrinsic part of politics. If you want to get realpolitik, losing that power means a loss of standing in the power balance between the Vidyadhara and other species on the Luofu.
Given the important role the Vidyadhara play in the Xianzhou Alliance as a whole then, it's not surprising that the judges decided not to go with execution. Forced molting is essentially death of personality, and supposedly amounts to the same thing in the frame of Vidyadhara culture anyway.
Now, what is surprising is that they kept Dan Heng in jail afterwards, despite the fact that legally and culturally, he is supposed to be viewed as a new person. Most likely, at this point, the Luofu government had discovered the Preceptors had tampered with the molting process, and thus were unsure if or how much Dan Heng is still Dan Feng.
So, what about the exile? It's implied that Jing Yuan pushed this through against the wishes of the Vidyadhara Preceptors and against the best interests of the Luofu. The former is certainly true, but is the latter?
The Preceptors wanted Dan Heng to be handed over to them. In the latest companion mission, we also saw what happened when Dan Heng came back to the Luofu. As long as he and Bailu are on the same ship, there are factions among the Vidyadhara which wants one of them to die.
The "conservative" faction wants to keep Bailu as their puppet leader, who has an empty title and no means to resist their decisions. Her maids are spies, and killed (forced reborn) if they start sympathizing with her. Her powers are specifically suppressed the moment she showed the ability to control the elements, so she can't be a physical threat "to the Luofu". So obviously they need Dan Heng to die.
The "radical" faction wants the destructive power that Dan Heng still carries, ostensibly to "make the Vidyadhara great again" (or keep them great, I guess). For them, Bailu is a useless mistake on the path to power.
In other words, handing Dan Heng back to the Vidyadhara may well have sparked a civil war among the Vidyadhara, and could easily have resulted in his death or Bailu's, or even both of them.
As a general reknowned more for stratagem and thinker than as a fighter, I can't imagine that Jing Yuan wouldn't think of this. And if so, it's easy to understand why he did not choose that option.
I guess he could've continued to keep Dan Heng in jail...but for how long? For another lifetime until he rebirths again? An entire lifetime spent in jail for a crime that his previous incarnation already paid for definitely seems "unjust". Not to mention, the average life expectancy of an Xianzhou general is shorter than lifespan left to the younger Dan Heng. So what happens when the next general takes over? It's just pushing the powderkeg further down the line.
From this line of thinking, exile doesn't seem to be a bad option. It prevents certain Vidyadhara from forming factions in their name if one party isn't even there. It forces them to treat Bailu to some modicum of respect because she's all that's left of the high elder inheritance they have on hand.
And then there's the question of: what about the guardianship of the Ambrosial Arbor? Isn't exiling Dan Heng effectively throwing away the keys to your local nuke silo?
But if you really think about it, would the Luofu still be able to trust Dan Heng with the guardianship of the Arbor? Maybe if it was a normal inheritance or even if he grew up a normal Vidyadhara. But Dan Heng was reborn in prison and grew up in prison for a crime he does not remember committing.
Sure, we know he's a moral and surprisingly well-adjusted individual still, on top of plot-protection as part of the player MC's coterie, but the Luofu doesn't have our omniscience. From their POV, can they really trust him to not resent them for he unfair treatment of this incarnation? To actually help instead of destroy if given the chance to use his key on the silo?
Or would it make more sense to keep him as far away from said superweapon as possible, just he in case he wants to act on his resentment, or even if he just slips up (due to having no formal training of his powers this incarnation) and commits another oopsies?
Also, we learn from the latest story missions that, ironically, Bailu is the one that inherited the power to seal the Arbor. Dan Heng only has the power to destroy/open the seal.
In other words, the Luofu actually did have the only part of the inheritance they needed to guard the Ambrosial Arbor. Of course, they also shot themselves in the foot in that by suppressing Bailu's powers from the beginning and not giving her any training in anything other than healing magic.
Of course, Jing Yuan and the other Luofu officials probably didn't know about this particular detail when they decided on the exile. But it is quite the irony that still ended up making the optimal decision from the perspective of the Luofu anyways.
References:
Dan Heng story 1 story 2
Bailu lore
And finally, on another topic, here's the current state of my account:

Currently at equilibrium level 4 (character max level 70). Waiting to raise my world level until I have built enough resources to upgrade the ~4 main damagers close to level 80 (which may take some time).
And then after that, I'll start seriously on the gear grind.
no subject
Have not been keeping up on DW, just logged in today and read the post. This is giving me ideas for my own mythology AU (football fandom). Keep updating on the lore, this stuff is pretty cool. (Also saves me from having to play the game myself, as I seem to have no time for games now.)
I take it that you're enjoying the game enough to want to grind? Also, are you managing your microtransactions better or is this another hole?
no subject
I am enjoying the game. The grind isn't too bad for me since I don't really demand perfection out of my units/builds and not rushing to finish all the endgame "hard" content. The stamina system makes it so I don't have to spend too much time playing every day to make progress.
Microtransactions...eh...yeah. Still shelling out for pretties (characters). I'll try to contain myself (no promises).
BTW, gameplay wise, I am tracking more of my progress on my alt FB account (where I also put my regular Nikki dressups): https://www.facebook.com/dawn.skyfire
no subject
Dad has me working on his papers. =.= It's a slow and painful process. But also I'm dealing with the bureaucratic stuff of getting my status updated and figuring out how to use the five million different apps that the intra-Chinese web is using. Everything is done on apps and everything has its own app, so I'm learning them one at a time.
Resist the pretties. It's a trap!
Also, I can't read your facebook if I'm not signed in and facebook won't let me sign in because I guess VPN is too scary or something. Aaarrrgh. But I also hate facebook and don't wanna make an account. (;_;)
no subject
Oh, wow, so FB is blocked by the great firewall? What other sites are? Is tumblr?
I suppose I could try mirroring the stuff the weibo or something, but I generally use weibo to follow the Zhou Shen fandom so there would be a lot of other stuff mixed in.
no subject
Yeah, I have a CN phone for the CN apps. I also have a CN # because everything is on mobile these days.
FB: Everything is blocked by firewall, but FB also blocks anyone not signed in. Like, literally cannot read anything on FB if I'm not logged into an FB account because FB is evil.
I can read tumblr if you mirror it on tumblr. Also FB won't let me create an account. I keep getting locked out for "fraud" or some shit like that. I guess VPN is triggering something on FB.
no subject
I figure I'll try to post to weibo instead of tumblr, so you can follow me there I guess?
Link: https://weibo.com/u/7702121056
Ignore the likes as I use that follow the ZS fandom. I haven't really posted or shared anything from that fandom since Aug though.
no subject
Oh no, did Honkai Starrail distract you from ZS fandom? Or is he just taking a break?
So yeah, FB is basically being obnoxious for no reason. I would've gotten an Instagram account if freaking FB didn't own it.
no subject
Is the person who commented on my last entry you?
白云下团子跑 https://weibo.com/u/7719150294
no subject
I know I keep getting locked out of Weibo on regular browsers, but I've yet to get locked out on Chrome. Weird.
And yes, that would be me. ヾ(•ω•`)o