I think you made a typo, is all.
Who is man supposed to be?
Indeed. In fact, episode two shows them (or at least Stormer, anyway) expressing âI canât lose youâ emotions. At the end of the episode, Stringer and Bulk both said that they had concern during the mission that they might not make it back (which is totally believable,â Bulk was just being a trooper when he was injured, and Stringer, being a veteran Hero with a generally laid-back demeanor, was doing his duty while showing the stability that the situation demanded of him, regardless of any dread he was experiencing internally).
On the subject of episode two, though: Is it me, or did the whole âVon Nessâ trauma/betrayal/foreboding/whatever it was seem over-played? Why would Stormer (other than being perfectionistic) blame himself for Von Nessâs betrayal, saying he âshouldâve seen it comingâ? Maybe Von Ness didnât first turn traitor on the New Stellac City battlefield, but instead voiced traitorous ideas to Stormer some time beforehand (kinda like Anakin in Attack of The Clones, but less overtly unstable?) but Stormer told him to put away such talk and covered for him, out of a bond friendship, thinking he could and did keep his teammate on the side of good? That could make more sense of as to why he blames himself so hard.
I think you made a typo, is all.
Who is man supposed to be?
Yeah, who?
Are you referring to humans?
Edit:
My bad. I just saw what you were referring to (emphasis mine):
I personally think Furno, Man, Stormer, Zib, and Quadle might be the best characters to come out of HF
âTwas a typo I made.
yeah, but who is MAN supposed to be?
âManâ was (I think) supposed to be âMakâ, as in âMegahertzâ.
Also, while weâre on the subject of episode two, since the heroâs cores have been severely upgraded by the time âOperation: Catch 'Em and 'Cuff 'Emâ comes around (as evidenced by Furnoâs anti-rust core charge, the fact that now only one hero is required to take down a single villain instead of a whole team of heroes, and an article on HeroSector01), should, logically, âHero Cellsâ now now be considered less dangerous, and therefore, used more often? Or would the up to 40% power boost not be high enough to warrant this?
Also:
Thay couldâve brain-washed them, so that they werenât focused on evo dying during their missions. Also, maybe that was the first time a hero died during a mission, and they didnât want the heros thinking about the danger.
Hmm⌠interesting. Though I would think that Zibâs confidence that Bulk wouldâve needed a core transplant had his hero core died would quite possibly mean that other heroes before episode 2 (and thus, before Evoâs personality change) would have had it happen to them before. Also, this theory would mean that the villain Core Hunter was pretty bad at his profession, only pulling-off 1-0 successful hits (depending on whether he was the cause of Evo getting taken-out*), which is not the impression given by this except from his HeroSector01 article (emphasis mine):
âThe Hero Core Remover Tool was Core Hunterâs signature weapon, used in his hunts to acquire Hero Cores from fallen Heroes. He also used a Plasma Shooter.â
The word âusedâ implies that he past-tense already used the weapon to steal the cores of multiple heroes, so I think itâs pretty safe to assume that core transplants have been performed before in HFâs history.
*That being said, I do not believe that Core Hunter was the reason Evo got a core transplant.
Also, while weâre on the subject of hero cores, we still consider the robot characters who donât have them (Zib, Quadle, Chief Drax, etc.) to also be alive, and not merely dead machines that simply imitate self-aware lifeforms, correct?
that is why is specified âneedâ, because yes, you would have to be blind not to see that the heroes express emotions. Emotions arenât intrinsic to their nature, that being the nature of a robot, so they can probably suppress emotions much more easily.
But is that what we actually witnessed?
As Iâve stated, Stormer seems to be ruled by his emotions, and he was one of the ones in Breakout, and he was treating Evo like he was just another annoying Rookie, and Furno, having been a fellow Alpha Team Rookie, and thus a likely candidate to empathize with and mourn over the passing of Evo, treated Evo like he was always the way he was, without even a tinge of sadness, but rather, some mild yet unfettered happiness at âhelping a rookie outâ.
See how thereâs a disconnect?
yeah, I do, I need to rewatch Herofactory, its been a little while
Ccbs and the animations minus 2014âs for obvious reasons.
I need to rewatch Herofactory
Sans Invasion From Below. The sets from that era were good, but the TV episode? Not so much.
in invasion from below, all of their faces reminded me of agori heads⌠exposed agori heads are UGLY
half the sets from breakout
The sets were good and story interesting. Best thing since Bionicle. I was sold the moment I saw the Von Nebula set. And my current avatar is from Hero Factory too, so it should not be a surprise that I like it!
HF was a weird case, because while the main show itself was just okay at best, the side material is where it shined. Stuff like HFFM, the books, these are what made Hero Factory great.
hero factory fm was amazing. stormer ripping macâs arms off the, the musical, the ads (best part) I also really liked the cleaner look of hero factory and I typically donât make toa, I build heroes books are great, show was okay but acceptable, setting could do with some work but thatâs the appeal of hf. you can fill in those bits yourself. recon team was cool as well. meso please notice me I like witch doc too
I was not even remotely engaged with Hero Factory and never engaged in post, so from that immensely narrow field of view Iâm gonna say the greatest thing about Hero Factory was the sizable expansion of the classic constraction part library