>>9973750>>9973808It do sometimes feel that way.
I seriously feel like, even though his toy line is a success, and he's made many figures in such a short amount of time, he's gonna pack it in in a few years. Once he's finally made all his childhood drawings and trading card characters into toys, he will feel complete with that chapter in his life, close it, and move on. Go back to his old toy job full-time. Make more music. Play more venues. Find someone to grow old with. Marry her. Glyos family of makers in attendance. Maybe have a few little Destasios. Teach them how to garden. Maybe raise some chickens. Show them the do's and don't's of the nearby brook he keeps losing toys in. Pool safety and upkeep. Local Wildlife awareness and what to do in case of coyotes/wolves/bears/etc. Raise the family. Get his kids into the arts and toy making so they have future employment opportunities. Watch his kids graduate, get married, grandkids. And then, if the climate and world hasn't gone to shit by then, maybe retire off to Japan to live out the rest of his days. A life well lived with a legacy cemented in toy making history and various online wikis. Maybe someone will make a documentary about him one day. Who knows?
Then...whoever of us are still alive by this time, will still be buying Glyos, until we die and our collections of old stuff get sold off by our families...only for them to be bought up by a 105 year old Brian, still flipping them for insane prices to middle-aged zoomers on eBay, who still go on 40chan to complain about his antics. Such is Life. Death. And Rebirth. But Brian, Brian is eternal.