Bill has a mansion and three girls who want him, leave them behind so he can go back to being miserable in Arlen

>Bill has a mansion and three girls who want him, leave them behind so he can go back to being miserable in Arlen
>Fry gets symbiotic worms that make him super-smart and muscular, forces them to leave because you should b ur self
>Fry has access to a lucky clover that works, leaves it to waste in his brothers grave, helping nobody, because it turns out his brother was a nice guy(then he would've wanted you to have the clover back retard)
Does anyone else hate it when a character throws away a huge opportunity just to keep the Status Quo?

pic unrelated

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>he missed the whole point of Luck of the Fryrish

C O L O N I Z E D

So what is the story after all conflict or threat is minimized by the new status quo?

I tend to hate it yes. I can understand it in comics but not cartoons that don't have to preserve legacies for centuries. Also
>Whitey thinks any women want him.
Ok bro.

What was that? Just b urself?

That wasn't his brother's grave, retard.

cope

>defacing someone else's art with memes
I hate this. Help me find the source.

By whom? She ends up with a green frog man.

Nephew, it was his his nephew's grave not his brother's.

It was literally not everything may be as it seems.

and then she fucked his commanding officer

She fucked everyone. Shes a slut.

1. If you introduce some kind of happy end that your character only rejects because of bad writing then you're a bad writer. Never introduce it in the first place or give it some kind of drawback that gives the character an actual reason to reject it.
2. A good writer can always find a way to create conflict, no matter how happy the ending or how powerful the character.
It's been eighteen years since I watched the episode so sorry for getting that meaningless factoid wrong you autistic retard, It doesn't make my gripe with the episode any less valid, because he still left the clover to waste in a grave.

>or give it some kind of drawback that gives the character an actual reason to reject it
Like desecrating the grave of your nephew who your brother named after you because he loved you?

He didn’t need the clover.
He only wanted it back because he thought Yancy stole it.

You already desecrated the grave by digging it up, at that point there's no reason to leave a powerful luck artifact to waste in the grave.
>He didn’t need the clover.
Yes because there are never any times in the series were Fry's life would've been improved by a little luck. Are you stupid or just trolling?

well, he's not exactly a virgin either. they probably got together just to compare stds.

>there's no reason to leave a powerful luck artifact to waste in the grave.
Of course there is. Its called good character development.

Character development is having a shit tier life?

Canonically Zap has a four in penis (erect)

Character development is taking a shit tier life on the nose because you feel bad for desecrating a grave of someone
1) you didn't know
2) for something petty
3) who was named by your brother, who you thought hated you, to carry on your name because he loved and missed you

Do you think stories shouldn't have any kind of character development or emotion based plot or something?

Luck isn't real, the clover just gave Fry confidence. The problem is that he didnt realize that. The end message to that episode as a whole is a little unclear, but the way I see was that Fry always thought Yancy hated him, and he thought he could keep that rivalry alive if he got the clover. But he realized that Yancy loved him enough to name his son Phillip, and that he didnt need the rivalry because he had his love? I dunno theres probably a video essay on it in YouTube

Not when the emotion development doesn't make sense.
>I won't take this magic mcguffin that is mine anyway because my brother stole it and my nephew died nearly a thousand years ago.

Reminds me of that Big Hero 6 episode where Hiro gets strength enhancements and they actually turn out to be effective in terms of stopping villains, but discards them completely just because they malfunctioned once.

Are you a faggot?

Fry was happy with his life. It doesn’t matter if you wanted more for him.

>give up yellow boy
>not green boy
Wasted opportunity.

Amy's right leg is fucked up

The episode where Fry is a cop and he turns out to be boss at it only to reveal that he's the "Heart" of the group and no one get's along when he's gone.