>>40740756>I also like how you've developed the world and characters as a whole.It's been quite a trip. Choosing to make everything one continuity helps a lot, since I can organize when, where, and how much I reveal, knowing that I can cover the other side of something later from a more suitable perspective.
>Her trainer isn't feeding her right. Probably just giving her lots of human junk food.But it tastes good!
>Is it actually genocide like it seems like?Owned pokemon that escape containment would preferably be secured and sent back to an owner if applicable, but wild outbreaks must be managed, and there is always a market for kibble.
>>40741483>maybe it would be worth scaling down the scope and doing it as vignettesAs I've answered this question by others before, I don't want to do it at all if I can't do it right. LL having been a project with a co-creator who ditched, I chose to take it at least to the end of the first main arc so it wouldn't be wasted effort and so people could enjoy what it had to offer. At worst, it'd be cut short but still able to stand on its own, and it'd have a shot at blooming in full, and I can live with that.
Trying to mash together uninspired material for the sake of supposed completeness, in my eyes, would be a compromise of integrity. I'd rather not be able to reach the top of the mountain than to climb a hill and try to claim a triumph.
And besides, there's a lot more to my catalogue than LL showing up when searching the "gardevoir" tag, including E/V which is effectively Book 0. Also, part of the point of one continuity is that there is no beginning and end; each story is a visit to one span of time and space among an infinity. No matter how many I might write, the story's next part remains unwritten.