Monday, April 2, 2012

Ultimate Marvel Vs. Capcom 3

"If you cannot protect yourself, then how can you ever hope to protect others? Strength Dante; everything depends on it." -Vergil (A Character from the video game series: "Devil May Cry"

The true epitome of verb-style rests in this as well as noun in my opinion also. The mere fact that he is directing such a passionately heated topic towards his blood brother in arms, Dante is truly a force to be debated with because, they both have outstanding fighting capabilities as well as vigor accompanied by a fascinatingly and nearly oxy-morotoic composition of their very beings/morals. They possess the powers of becoming super-strong "Devil Forms" (Devil Trigger Mechanism) although they defend humanity and other innocents from foreign higher-powers that seek total annihilation of humanity and all that is just. This quote remained with me well after seeing it in a fighting game that I personally own called Ultimate Marvel Vs. Capcom 3. This quote is one of Vergil's win quotes after he defeats an opponent, winning the entire match-up for however many rounds set by the player. Hieroglyphics are used here with the abrupt and sweet pause that lasts even only a few seconds before he continues on with the rest of his dialogue. Isocolon rests within this rather faintly though, and the power of it seems to be deflected by the words of the passage alone. The humbling lens is by far the most powerful and "strong" of the techniques here that I see offhand. It in the most literal sense operates that way anyway in order to humble Dante and create a repoire between the two so that Dante can realize how much more he can still develope despite being as strong as he already is; even without the "Devil Trigger." (I've noticed many videogames borrow and use many mix-ups, martianing lenses and saturated verb-styles associated with "Devil.")

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