Gendo and Yui were probably in the top 0.1% of people on the planet in terms of Intelligence, yet their son struggles to grasp even age appropriate concepts such as thermal expansion.
does LCL exposure before birth cause a FAS-like set of birth defects?
He was raised by a hobo Gendo pay 10 bucks a day to take care of him.
Elijah Gutierrez
At 14, figured out how to pilot an EVA, cooks meals for 10 people, and has some intuition on how to fight. He's very talented.
The problem is that he's neglected and finds his dad loves his sister more than him. He's going to grow up to be a mass murderer.
Henry Cox
>Gendo and Yui were probably in the top 0.1% of people on the planet in terms of Intelligence AHAHAHAHAHA. Holy fuck, watch the show again, they were fucking stupid.
Josiah Morgan
>why is he stupid if their """"intelligent""" parents didn't raised him? God, zoomers are fucking stupid holy shit.
Adam Reed
>He's going to grow up to be a mass murderer. user, I....
Nathaniel Myers
Because his parents didn’t raise him retard
John Rivera
They didn't raise him and second impact fucked up infrastructure so schooling was probably dogshit.
Jaxson Allen
maybe he stopped watching and let headcanon take over
Carson Robinson
>He's going to grow up to be a mass murderer. should we tell him?
Brody Clark
Intelligence isn't entirely genetic. Your parents could have 200 iq each but still have 100iq children.
Dylan Bailey
What determins it the most
Ryder Richardson
genetics
Charles Richardson
Asuka is just an STEMlord autist who probably gets BTFO by Japanese high school level humanities studies.
Did you watch the show? Yui fucking died when he was like 4 and Gendo abandoned him shortly thereafter. Also, remember that he's literally a teenager.
Cameron Howard
he's a neglected 14 year old that's being taken care of a 28 year old slut who knows nothing about taking care of children.
Bentley Morgan
Shinji is into music, not science. Both are pretty close but not quite the same. Reminder that Shinji bond with Kaworu and almost bond with Asuka with music involved
given that post-2i japan is just '95 culturally he'd probably play adnd if he played any tabletop at all (and by play i mean get roped into being asuka's character's healer and pack mule)
Cameron Scott
damn I wish I had friends
Isaac Hernandez
Who would he even play adnd with? Nigga, at best he does Fighting Fantasy.
Asher Allen
>Paintings that took years of work that people paid to steal off cheaper artists, leaving the majority of them crazy and broken >Mass produced paintings made to be done by the hundreds, where the most popular artist is a happy drunk and his daughter
Jordan Phillips
Shinji is an eldar player He doesn't have the guts toserve the emprah
William Baker
Kensuke?
Ryder Murphy
nytimes.com/2018/03/26/arts/design/vincent-van-gogh-japan.html?smid=tw-nytimesarts&smtyp=cur >Vincent van Gogh saw the crisp skies of Japanese woodcut prints. The almond blossoms, gnarled trees and irises that dotted the French landscape reminded him of nature scenes painted in Kyoto. And in the locals who drank in cafes of Arles, he saw resonances with the geishas and Kabuki actors of a country he’d never visited. >“My dear brother, you know, I feel I’m in Japan,” van Gogh wrote to his brother, Theo, on March 16, 1888, not long after he had settled in Arles, an ancient city built on Roman ruins by the Rhône River in France. >By June he was urging Theo and other Impressionist artists in Paris to join him in there. “I’d like you to spend some time here, you’d feel it,” he wrote. “After some time your vision changes, you see with a more Japanese eye, you feel color differently.” >The painter had been bitten by the bug of “Japonisme,” a mania for Japanese aesthetics that swept Europe in the 19th century, and which also afflicted painters such as Claude Monet, Édouard Manet and Edgar Degas. >By the time the artist moved to Arles a year later, he was fully in the thrall of Japan. On the train from Paris, he repeatedly checked out the window, he wrote to his friend Paul Gauguin, “to see ‘if it was like Japan yet’! Childish, isn’t it?’” >“The first year in Arles, everything is Japan,” said Bakker. “Later, after his breakdown, that changes, and he still refers to it but it’s less important. The nature of his admiration had changed. It has become integrated into his style but it’s no longer his artistic model.”