Y'know, if there's one thing I wouldn't mind being stuck inside a time capsule and unveiled to a world that has no context as to what it is, it would be this.
If I didn't know about Stonetoss and Among Us before hand, I would have assumed that this was intended as a serious piece of semi-abstract/surreal art and appreciated it as such and would have probably stared at it for an hour trying to extrapolate the deeper meaning of it.
The virtue of adversity
The man on the left who lives in ruins stands tall, proud, and muscular, staring condescendingly at the being within the bubble. A being that has been warped from a disconnect with the outside world, instead living comfortably within an artificial utopia.
It critiques the escapism and comforts of a bubble environment, glorifying the superior character built from acknowledging and confronting the harsh edges of survival.
Top Comments
Kommando_Kaijin
Jun 05, 2021 at 01:48PM EDT
King of Udon
Jun 05, 2021 at 03:16PM EDT in reply to