At any point I had a favorite or rather preferred lifeline just to avoid the confusion. Was I alone? What was yours?
- Reitumetse_R
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At any point I had a favorite or rather preferred lifeline just to avoid the confusion. Was I alone? What was yours?
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I also really loved the blue line alot. Although, i didn't confine myself to it, i explored the other worldlines too. I mean its only normal to, after all we are talking a many worlds scale here.
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Mine was the Blue line. But I also like the broken down character of Gary from the black line. So I would eagerly wait for the chapter with this line.Reitumetse_R wrote: ↑03 Jul 2021, 11:11 I absolutely loved the blue line at the beginning of the book and advanced to the red line later on. As for the black line, well, the committed crime was just too much for me and the entire vibe in that line was depressing
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pronouns: she/they
“Don't worry, honey. I'll keep the home fires burning.” — Gideon Nav, Harrow the Ninth (Tamsyn Muir)
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I love Blue Line, too but mainly because of how things went towards the ending. I'm not sure yet if I'd say it was more interesting than the others, though, especially since the other worldlines offered a different side for the characters. I say "different" but they may actually be more intense and thrilling.
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- lavkathleen
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Right?! The Blue Line is my favorite, too but if we're going to talk about the levels of interest the different worldlines get, the others wouldn't be far off. I guess it's because we have a "main" worldline in our head, and the rest gives that excitement and curiousity of what things look like in another world.Reader Chavez wrote: ↑04 Jul 2021, 20:16 I agree that the blue line was the best, it was also the one I found more interesting and entertaining. The black line had the crime on it, which made me dislike the Gary on that line, but I found it also interesting because it gives us a different perspective of the story.
pronouns: she/they
“Don't worry, honey. I'll keep the home fires burning.” — Gideon Nav, Harrow the Ninth (Tamsyn Muir)
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I think you meant antagonist? Instead of protagonist? I wouldn't say that he's the antagonist, though. For someone to be an antagonist, he has to be fighting against the protagonist. In your case, I guess blueline!Gary would be the protagonist? Well, blackline!Gary wasn't trying to fight him. This is a good example of man versus nature kind of story, since they're all trying to deal with the universe and its physics and their fate.Fahad Baibras wrote: ↑05 Jul 2021, 01:59 The Black line Garry in my opinion is to be blamed for the murder, He was the most ideal protagonist but if it wasn't for the black line Garry, the story won't have been this interesting.
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“Don't worry, honey. I'll keep the home fires burning.” — Gideon Nav, Harrow the Ninth (Tamsyn Muir)