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Spiteful Murkrow

Busy Writing Stories I Want to Read
Pronouns
He/Him/His
Partners
  1. nidoran-f
  2. druddigon
  3. swellow
  4. lugia
  5. quilava-fobbie
  6. sneasel-kate
  7. heliolisk-fobbie
Heya, I worked my way down my hitlist of people to review today and decided to give one of your works a spin in return for your generous review of Once a Thief this year. I know you’ve been fairly adamant that you’re not a fan of line-by-line reviews in other parts on the net, so took a bit of a leap of faith and went a bit out of my comfort zone for this review to try and accommodate those preferences. So if you find it a bit weird compared to my normal reviews, apologies in advance:

Chapter 1

By and large, the opening chapter does a good job at setting the stage for characterization. Jyararanga is the scary, outwardly brutish type who seems to have good reasons for snatching Ariala, while Rune and Diantha are cute and plucky. Their characterizations are by and large pretty believable, even if I do wonder if they talked themselves into believing that their “dad” was a kidnapper kinda fast instead of settling on a more neutral rationalization for why their dad would snatch a Pokémon from an enemy kingdom against her will. Ariala I had a bit of a harder time getting a read on as a character since she was basically in a cringing nervous panic for most of her screentime, so I can’t tell if that’s a representative vibe for her as a character or not. I suppose that that’s something to keep an eye on for the future.

Most of the general points of critique I’d have for this chapter are things you asked not to hear about and you consider this story complete. But I do still have a few points of critique for the event that you ever decide to touch this story up further. First and foremost, I kinda wish we got to see a bit more of the surrounding world or have it hinted at, like there’s a passing mention of a Fairy Kingdom in the sky but it felt a little hard to ground things for what the setting was like. Though then again, maybe future chapters will pick up the slack there. Secondly, it might have made sense to explain a bit more in your introductory post as to how this work relates to others, since I’m pretty sure that Rune and Diantha also appear in other stories you write, but I’m not sure how they interrelate with one another and if I need any additional context to understand this story going into it.

Chapter 2

Well, we didn’t have to wait long at all to find out about this world. Airships, huh? You’re giving me some old-school Final Fantasy vibes here. Also, the fairies apparently have Tapus as their patron deities. Filling that one away for later. I do kinda wonder if the significance of why Pokémon are wielding weapons ought to have been elaborated on a bit more either in this chapter or the one before. IIRC from what you’ve said about your stories’ setting in the past, something happened to make Pokémon unable to attack with their normal elemental attacks or something like that, but that’s not acknowledged at all here and I wouldn’t have known what was going on for why Pokémon were using stuff like swords instead of normal attacks without that meta knowledge. The elemental super weapon just lying around was also neat and seems to be playing up the more magical side of this FF-style setting. I do wonder if it’d have worked better with some form of foreshadowing since it feels a bit weird to get something this big dropped on us out of the blue narratively.

Things kinda went from 0-100 in this chapter. Some of it in ways that felt well-executed, while others I wasn’t as sure about. The moment when Jyararanga shows up to bail out Rune and Diantha from the fairy soldiers just casually cleaves one of them in two was definitely a nice reminder of why the 15+ rating is in the preamble, and to add a cold splash of water in the faces of our young, strapping protagonists that they live in a dangerous world where sometimes ugly things will happen. That said, some other things felt like they could’ve been telegraphed a bit more. The transition into the ruined temple comes to mind since it felt really abrupt and like it might have worked better with more buildup in chapter 1 or more acknowledgment of the “wait, we *have* one of these in the castle” moments.

On the characterization side, I thought that things were a bit of a mixed bag. Rune and Diantha did a good job reminding us that at the end of the day they’re relatively young siblings with that argument between them and show off their sheltered background given that their immediate response to being approached by armed fairies is essentially “halt there, evildoers!”. At the same time, I’m not sure if I buy how quickly Rune and Diantha come around to buying the resulting bloodbath as being needless since the Fairies were very much the aggressors in this skirmish, already injured Rune, and didn’t exactly make any attempts at a peaceful resolution. Like I get that Jyararanga wasn’t going to bring up the whole “I need Clefairy to save the world” thing the gang isn’t used to seeing a bunch of Pokémon have their insides turned into their outsides in front of them and that it’s shocking and traumatic, especially for Ariala, but I think the logic was missing a step there. Or at least up until the part where Jyararanga blows the fleeing airship out of the air. That feels like a pretty definitive point for “dad, you didn’t need to do that” even with Rune and Diantha’s upbringing

There’s a couple moments that feel like they’re building to stuff in the future, even if we didn’t really get a chance to see what they looked like in this chapter. First off was the part where Diantha gets souped up with unnatural wind magic or something, which I suppose would explain the warning signs going up to the ruined temple. Though she’s clearly seemed to be taking the change well™ in the aftermath of things. There was also Rune getting a bit restless in the wake of the whole “Diantha getting impaled” moment and Jyararanga harshly slapping him down. Like as much of a jerk Jyanraranga was being, especially with just casually throwing that bit about questioning whether or not he should’ve adopted the two out there, he kinda had a point. Can’t tell if he’s being built up to be a villain or else someone who’s more morally gray given that he kidnapped a princess, but apparently did it because the fate of the world was in the balance.

Also, I had a hard time getting a read on Ariala’s personality again. Since she kinda fades out towards the end. There was something that seemed like it was trimmed by accident from the “someone he loved” part, since there’s no mention of either Jyararanga or Diantha being injured until afterwards when the shadow monster thingy is impaling Diantha. Perhaps she was meant to have a moment there that accidentally got edited out?

Chapter 3

And we open things up with a timeskip of… 10 years, huh? That’s definitely quite the jump ahead. It felt a bit sudden since we didn’t really get any resolution with whatever was going on Jyararanga and Ariala back in Chapter 2. I think the idea was that she got away with the attacking fairies? But I honestly couldn’t tell from the narration that was provided which would make for the morbid possibility that she’s just around here in Jyararanga chilling in a tower like Rapunzel.

We get a few odds and ends filled in this chapter for what on earth went down 10 years ago and what went down since. The shadowblob thingy that impaled Diantha was a Shadow Pokémon, which is apparently bad news… for some reason. And Jyararanga went to Faeria for diplomacy to arrange an alliance by marriage with Ariala. I wasn’t expecting that one. Age must’ve taken the edge off him, even if I’m a bit surprised that Faeria would honor that request since… the whole kidnapping thing and all that, but I suppose staring down a planet-wide catastrophe helps put things into perspective.

Characterization-wise, everyone’s really different this chapter. Which I suppose is realistic after 10 years of changes, even if something about the present and past personalities feels a little disconnected. Like Jyararanga has mellowed with age, Rune has grown more duty-minded, and Diantha has gone into an overtly feminine phase, which I suppose aren’t unreasonable destinations for where they would’ve wound up after 10 years, but given how we were just barely getting to know them in the past two, I wonder if the dynamic would’ve worked better with more callbacks to the way things were to provide a sense of continuity. Though then again, I suppose that could just be a function of “keep reading ahead”, since Diantha apparently picked up magic powers from the whole shadowblob episode and with that ominous sly giggling at the end, it seems like some of those changes she went through might not necessarily have been net positives.

In general, I thought that this story showed some decent promise especially with its really interesting hook, though things were a bit uneven, to the point that I question whether or not I’d have enjoyed it as much reading it without meta foreknowledge. Though I suppose that as a finished work, it’s best to let sleeping dogs lie and learn from the past for future endeavors.

I don’t know how much more of this story I’ll be reading from this point on, but you did catch my eye with the setting @HaruMiju . I suppose that’s a sign to come back and re-visit it in another story with a bit more polish sometime in the future.
 

HaruMiju

Hero in their dreams
Location
London
Pronouns
They/them, She/her,
Heya, I worked my way down my hitlist of people to review today and decided to give one of your works a spin in return for your generous review of Once a Thief this year. I know you’ve been fairly adamant that you’re not a fan of line-by-line reviews in other parts on the net, so took a bit of a leap of faith and went a bit out of my comfort zone for this review to try and accommodate those preferences. So if you find it a bit weird compared to my normal reviews, apologies in advance:

Chapter 1

By and large, the opening chapter does a good job at setting the stage for characterization. Jyararanga is the scary, outwardly brutish type who seems to have good reasons for snatching Ariala, while Rune and Diantha are cute and plucky. Their characterizations are by and large pretty believable, even if I do wonder if they talked themselves into believing that their “dad” was a kidnapper kinda fast instead of settling on a more neutral rationalization for why their dad would snatch a Pokémon from an enemy kingdom against her will. Ariala I had a bit of a harder time getting a read on as a character since she was basically in a cringing nervous panic for most of her screentime, so I can’t tell if that’s a representative vibe for her as a character or not. I suppose that that’s something to keep an eye on for the future.

Most of the general points of critique I’d have for this chapter are things you asked not to hear about and you consider this story complete. But I do still have a few points of critique for the event that you ever decide to touch this story up further. First and foremost, I kinda wish we got to see a bit more of the surrounding world or have it hinted at, like there’s a passing mention of a Fairy Kingdom in the sky but it felt a little hard to ground things for what the setting was like. Though then again, maybe future chapters will pick up the slack there. Secondly, it might have made sense to explain a bit more in your introductory post as to how this work relates to others, since I’m pretty sure that Rune and Diantha also appear in other stories you write, but I’m not sure how they interrelate with one another and if I need any additional context to understand this story going into it.

Chapter 2

Well, we didn’t have to wait long at all to find out about this world. Airships, huh? You’re giving me some old-school Final Fantasy vibes here. Also, the fairies apparently have Tapus as their patron deities. Filling that one away for later. I do kinda wonder if the significance of why Pokémon are wielding weapons ought to have been elaborated on a bit more either in this chapter or the one before. IIRC from what you’ve said about your stories’ setting in the past, something happened to make Pokémon unable to attack with their normal elemental attacks or something like that, but that’s not acknowledged at all here and I wouldn’t have known what was going on for why Pokémon were using stuff like swords instead of normal attacks without that meta knowledge. The elemental super weapon just lying around was also neat and seems to be playing up the more magical side of this FF-style setting. I do wonder if it’d have worked better with some form of foreshadowing since it feels a bit weird to get something this big dropped on us out of the blue narratively.

Things kinda went from 0-100 in this chapter. Some of it in ways that felt well-executed, while others I wasn’t as sure about. The moment when Jyararanga shows up to bail out Rune and Diantha from the fairy soldiers just casually cleaves one of them in two was definitely a nice reminder of why the 15+ rating is in the preamble, and to add a cold splash of water in the faces of our young, strapping protagonists that they live in a dangerous world where sometimes ugly things will happen. That said, some other things felt like they could’ve been telegraphed a bit more. The transition into the ruined temple comes to mind since it felt really abrupt and like it might have worked better with more buildup in chapter 1 or more acknowledgment of the “wait, we *have* one of these in the castle” moments.

On the characterization side, I thought that things were a bit of a mixed bag. Rune and Diantha did a good job reminding us that at the end of the day they’re relatively young siblings with that argument between them and show off their sheltered background given that their immediate response to being approached by armed fairies is essentially “halt there, evildoers!”. At the same time, I’m not sure if I buy how quickly Rune and Diantha come around to buying the resulting bloodbath as being needless since the Fairies were very much the aggressors in this skirmish, already injured Rune, and didn’t exactly make any attempts at a peaceful resolution. Like I get that Jyararanga wasn’t going to bring up the whole “I need Clefairy to save the world” thing the gang isn’t used to seeing a bunch of Pokémon have their insides turned into their outsides in front of them and that it’s shocking and traumatic, especially for Ariala, but I think the logic was missing a step there. Or at least up until the part where Jyararanga blows the fleeing airship out of the air. That feels like a pretty definitive point for “dad, you didn’t need to do that” even with Rune and Diantha’s upbringing

There’s a couple moments that feel like they’re building to stuff in the future, even if we didn’t really get a chance to see what they looked like in this chapter. First off was the part where Diantha gets souped up with unnatural wind magic or something, which I suppose would explain the warning signs going up to the ruined temple. Though she’s clearly seemed to be taking the change well™ in the aftermath of things. There was also Rune getting a bit restless in the wake of the whole “Diantha getting impaled” moment and Jyararanga harshly slapping him down. Like as much of a jerk Jyanraranga was being, especially with just casually throwing that bit about questioning whether or not he should’ve adopted the two out there, he kinda had a point. Can’t tell if he’s being built up to be a villain or else someone who’s more morally gray given that he kidnapped a princess, but apparently did it because the fate of the world was in the balance.

Also, I had a hard time getting a read on Ariala’s personality again. Since she kinda fades out towards the end. There was something that seemed like it was trimmed by accident from the “someone he loved” part, since there’s no mention of either Jyararanga or Diantha being injured until afterwards when the shadow monster thingy is impaling Diantha. Perhaps she was meant to have a moment there that accidentally got edited out?

Chapter 3

And we open things up with a timeskip of… 10 years, huh? That’s definitely quite the jump ahead. It felt a bit sudden since we didn’t really get any resolution with whatever was going on Jyararanga and Ariala back in Chapter 2. I think the idea was that she got away with the attacking fairies? But I honestly couldn’t tell from the narration that was provided which would make for the morbid possibility that she’s just around here in Jyararanga chilling in a tower like Rapunzel.

We get a few odds and ends filled in this chapter for what on earth went down 10 years ago and what went down since. The shadowblob thingy that impaled Diantha was a Shadow Pokémon, which is apparently bad news… for some reason. And Jyararanga went to Faeria for diplomacy to arrange an alliance by marriage with Ariala. I wasn’t expecting that one. Age must’ve taken the edge off him, even if I’m a bit surprised that Faeria would honor that request since… the whole kidnapping thing and all that, but I suppose staring down a planet-wide catastrophe helps put things into perspective.

Characterization-wise, everyone’s really different this chapter. Which I suppose is realistic after 10 years of changes, even if something about the present and past personalities feels a little disconnected. Like Jyararanga has mellowed with age, Rune has grown more duty-minded, and Diantha has gone into an overtly feminine phase, which I suppose aren’t unreasonable destinations for where they would’ve wound up after 10 years, but given how we were just barely getting to know them in the past two, I wonder if the dynamic would’ve worked better with more callbacks to the way things were to provide a sense of continuity. Though then again, I suppose that could just be a function of “keep reading ahead”, since Diantha apparently picked up magic powers from the whole shadowblob episode and with that ominous sly giggling at the end, it seems like some of those changes she went through might not necessarily have been net positives.

In general, I thought that this story showed some decent promise especially with its really interesting hook, though things were a bit uneven, to the point that I question whether or not I’d have enjoyed it as much reading it without meta foreknowledge. Though I suppose that as a finished work, it’s best to let sleeping dogs lie and learn from the past for future endeavors.

I don’t know how much more of this story I’ll be reading from this point on, but you did catch my eye with the setting @HaruMiju . I suppose that’s a sign to come back and re-visit it in another story with a bit more polish sometime in the future.
Ohey, a TR review, last thing I was expecting to start my new year off with, hee hee. Thankies a bunch, it's nice to see comments on this old work of mine again. I'm guessing it's for that review blitz thingy.
A few things to preface though - I don't use this site anymore, nor am I in the discord, which means this version of the fic is potentially outdated. I forget when I gave it my final final edits, but based on your comments, it may not make a difference to what you're iffy about regarding it. I'd still recommend reading it on Wattpad, Ao3 or Fanfiction just to make sure. This goes for all my fics on TR, for that matter. Just something to keep in mind if you decide to keep reading!

There's also been a bit of confusion on the background of this fic. The one where pokemon can't use their powers and must use weapons is an entirely different fic of mine called Heroica Legends. This one, Astral Genealogy, is simply Fire Emblem inspired, so I sought to use weapon types from that series and plop a few nods to mechanics here and there. Legendary weapons and weapon triangle, a royal gathering an army on a journey, marriage and future children, that kind of thing.
Lastly, like you said, yeah this fic is being left alone at this point to focus on new stuff and leave it as is, an example of my writing back then. I'm still sorta happy you chose this fic though, out of all the ones I've written, AG is the one that gets the least interest!

As for the story itself, I'm wondering if it would have been better not to limit the sizes of the early parts to 5k and just let them end up as long as they ended up. 5k was a chapter length recommended to me at the time because I was known and complained at for having long, novel-sized fanfics that people in my circle/site were put off from reading. Doing so might've just made more spoilt children fluff, but would've left more room for getting to know their childhoods. You still get to hear about these things, alongside the world, the way it functions, all that jazz, but it's sorta spread later on in the fic and only expanded on when it gets brought up, all to keep chapter lengths shorter and sweeter. I don't do this sort of thing anymore, but it remains the bones of this fic and feels like everyone's issue with it, personal feelings on timeskips or characterization flips aside.

Up to you what you decide to do with all this from here on, but either way, I appreciate it!
 

Spiteful Murkrow

Busy Writing Stories I Want to Read
Pronouns
He/Him/His
Partners
  1. nidoran-f
  2. druddigon
  3. swellow
  4. lugia
  5. quilava-fobbie
  6. sneasel-kate
  7. heliolisk-fobbie
Heya, dropping back into this story as part of Review Blitz to work my way down my list of target authors. My understanding is that you consider this story to be done and dusted, so this time around, I’ll have a bit less criticism and focus more on vibes since the general issues I spotted were more or less the same ones as the first three chapters and I don’t feel as if they’re really worth repeating in detail too much when you can just scroll up a post.

Anyhow, let’s get right into things:

Chapter 4

So this chapter seemed to focus mostly on the theory of Rune’s knight training meeting actual practice on his journey to get a fairy wife in Faernia. He very quickly establishes himself as being very sheltered from the way he just blunders into an argument and manages to get both sides pissed off at him. I’ll admit that I didn’t see Diantha sneaking out and forming relationships with the local Pokémon over the course of years coming, but it does allow for a fun contrast between the two siblings (and was probably necessary to keep Rune from just faceplanting right off the bat).

Things quickly took a very dark turn in Marble Rock which just from its opening depiction already vibed as a craphole, but then when the state of affairs with the landlords effectively pricing out everyone from the town, the locals being in states where at least one named character was more or less “just go ahead and kill me, life sucks anyways”, while the one place that’s doing well is the ‘Breeding Center’ that turns out to be an implied body farm of sapient Pokémon for meat, uh… well… yikes. I do think it’d have benefitted from a more gradual buildup, but I suppose that’s a benefit of hindsight.

I know that you said that this story pulls primarily from Fire Emblem, but I honestly saw some shades of FF4 between the world setup and Rune’s background of “knight for a kingdom with obviously bad news leadership” (see, I knew Jyanraranga casually splatting those fairies in Chapter 2 was a bad sign). We also got introduced to Galen, who is chasing lofty goals of being able to be a travelling bard and bring joy to the world… and financing it by being a tax collector, which… good luck with that one, Bob. But hey, he at least brought our gang to the local landlord, which took us right into…

Chapter 5

I’ll admit, Kelsith kinda caught me off-guard from the way that based off the information we know of her, she goes from a cowardly, pathetic, and absolutely hateable figure that we’re rooting to die in a slow and painful fashion, to… well, she’s honestly still kinda cowardly and pathetic, but it’s a much more understandable cowardly and pathetic that comes with having the official job of being the designated scapegoat of the actual landlord. Like it even extends to her portrayal as being portrayed as pudgy, which goes from being reflexively assumed to be the byproduct of living large at the Marbles’ expense to finding out that it’s the lingering aftereffects of a time when she was being fattened up to become someone’s main course. Like some of the leadup and aftereffects kinda missed a step from overcompression, but the core did a very good job at pulling a twist such that we 180 pretty naturally on her. Also, even if it’s not quite organizing ‘hunts’ of sapient Pokémon for meat levels of suck, Faernia apparently also isn’t exactly a nice place given that they willfully kicked Kelsith down to Eris knowing what her likely fate would be.

Emerson… felt like he could’ve been built out a little more since he apparently is dying of a lingering illness whose treatment can only be sourced from Faernia, while he has a really sketch day job on behalf of the Dragon Kingdom. Like it’s not even communicated whether or not he has any reservations or changes of mind about said job which at one point slated him to kill his now-wife, and if anything, he actually vibes as prideful about it, which… was a little confusing as to how to interpret that. I was also a bit surprised that he was well enough to journey in spite of his present condition, but I suppose if Yulyana could do it in FF4, it’s good enough here.

Anyhow, this chapter ends with Rune and Diantha being a bit less alone for their upcoming journey to Faernia, and it’s handled on a bit of a cute note. Like whatever gripes I had about the actual journey to get to this point, it was a nice heartwarming moment.

Chapter 6

This was the chapter where things really started getting lit. We started off trying to tie some loose ends down in Marble Rock which… I honestly am unsure whether I found believable or not since while Kelsith was a victim herself, you’d think there’d be a lot of Pokémon in Corey’s place who would be slow to let things go with her, Emerson, and Galen. Then we take a hop, skip and a jump over to Magma Heel, pick up Ptero, the suspiciously competent Emolga mailmon who honestly feels like he’s a step away from being the return of Edge from FF4. He acts as our main conduit for doing some worldbuilding about why those airships in Chapter 2 were a thing, and getting Rune nice and hot and bothered since being within the same castle walls as Jyararanga his entire life has apparently left Rune without a sense of humor.

And then everything promptly goes straight to hell with the arrival of Mirror, our Masked Absol buddy from the cover art, who’s part of some totally-not-bad-news Constellars cult on Faernia and rocks a completely broken ability to summon white ghost/spirit/whatever Pokémon as extra attackers that can only be defeated by counterattacks. Oh, and Diantha can apparently do some broken stuff too with magic. I kinda felt like the more off-spec antics could’ve used a bit more buildup and/or clarification of “this is how things work”, but I suppose the fact that literally everyone is blindsided by them kinda helped. Oh, also, the battle basically quickly became “Rune and Diantha faceplant against Mirror” without much acknowledgement of the rest of the cast, which… you know what, fair enough, they were probably busy trying not to die from those Ancient Spectres, even if it’d have been nice to get a couple reminders of their existence here and there.

Even if I had some execution gripes, the chapter more or less accomplished what it needed to: Mirror showed up and ruined everyone’s day as an Early Story Boss by illustrating that they’re way in over their heads against him, while making it known that there are stronger foes still that want Rune dead. Diantha gets in some foreshadowing for stuff that I’m sure will be important later and prevents a total party kill by forcing Mirror to bail, and everyone’s left limping off for some medical attention. Not bad for a wakeup call chapter a little under a fifth into the story’s run.

So I know that you’ve probably moved on to later and greater things and largely written off this platform, but for what it’s worth I hope you give the site another shot with one of your stories you feel is more representative of your present output, @HaruMiju . Even if there was some obvious jank, the basic core of this story was pretty enjoyable with a setting that stands out quite a bit from the PMD crowd (I mean, the fact that it reminded me of my experience with FF4 at points certainly didn’t hurt either). The fact that this review wound up ballooning from what was originally intended to be a one-and-done into a full three-chapter experience is testament to that.

Best of luck with your current writing, and I’m sure I’ll see you around again, if not necessarily on this site or with this story.
 
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