Yup. They actually mentioned kintsugi in the skin's description in game which you can check out on pts, and iirc they mentioned it in a recent article. But yeah, its such a beautiful skin and the theme and inspiration fits perfectly.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »
"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
colossalvoids wrote: »"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
It can be named "unbroken" if wasn't just left sit broken but was repaired in some way. Just like people who are called "unbroken" are usually being broken by something previous to their recovery if it makes sense, or endure whilst being broken.
Dragonnord wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
It can be named "unbroken" if wasn't just left sit broken but was repaired in some way. Just like people who are called "unbroken" are usually being broken by something previous to their recovery if it makes sense, or endure whilst being broken.
That's not the definition of Unbroken.
Unbroken means that never broke before. If it got broken, then it's called Repaired.
I have checked several dictionaries, so not trying to be picky, but really, unbroken means that it never got broken, not that it broke and got fixed with glue or whatever means.
colossalvoids wrote: »Dragonnord wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
It can be named "unbroken" if wasn't just left sit broken but was repaired in some way. Just like people who are called "unbroken" are usually being broken by something previous to their recovery if it makes sense, or endure whilst being broken.
That's not the definition of Unbroken.
Unbroken means that never broke before. If it got broken, then it's called Repaired.
I have checked several dictionaries, so not trying to be picky, but really, unbroken means that it never got broken, not that it broke and got fixed with glue or whatever means.
Seems English is way less flexible than I thought compare to other languages j speak/know,l. Still heard people use it that way somehow, but won't insist.
RaddlemanNumber7 wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »Dragonnord wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
It can be named "unbroken" if wasn't just left sit broken but was repaired in some way. Just like people who are called "unbroken" are usually being broken by something previous to their recovery if it makes sense, or endure whilst being broken.
That's not the definition of Unbroken.
Unbroken means that never broke before. If it got broken, then it's called Repaired.
I have checked several dictionaries, so not trying to be picky, but really, unbroken means that it never got broken, not that it broke and got fixed with glue or whatever means.
Seems English is way less flexible than I thought compare to other languages j speak/know,l. Still heard people use it that way somehow, but won't insist.
"Unbroken" is a fine piece of English. It's a perfectly acceptable example of artistic license - the adjectival form of the transitive verb "to unbrake", which goes beyond repair, not only fixing something someone else broke but making it better than it was before, as an expression of defiance
RaddlemanNumber7 wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »Dragonnord wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »"10 years unbroken" is how it's captioned.
Yet the skin represents something that has been broken and is now repaired. Is that what I read?
Where does the 'unbroken' bit come in?
It can be named "unbroken" if wasn't just left sit broken but was repaired in some way. Just like people who are called "unbroken" are usually being broken by something previous to their recovery if it makes sense, or endure whilst being broken.
That's not the definition of Unbroken.
Unbroken means that never broke before. If it got broken, then it's called Repaired.
I have checked several dictionaries, so not trying to be picky, but really, unbroken means that it never got broken, not that it broke and got fixed with glue or whatever means.
Seems English is way less flexible than I thought compare to other languages j speak/know,l. Still heard people use it that way somehow, but won't insist.
"Unbroken" is a fine piece of English. It's a perfectly acceptable example of artistic license - the adjectival form of the transitive verb "to unbrake", which goes beyond repair, not only fixing something someone else broke but making it better than it was before, as an expression of defiance
I think I've only ever used the word "unbroken" in regard to horses....