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- Season 9 Wow
- Red Vs Blue All Seasons
- Red Vs Blue Season 9 Soundtrack Free Download 2017
- Red Vs Blue Music Download
Blue: Season 9 Soundtrack contains music from Season 9 of Red vs. Blue.The music is composed by Jeff Williams and features members of the cast. It also features other artists such as: Casey Williams, Sandy Lee Casey, and Lamar Hall. The soundtrack is now available on Amazon, iTunes, and the RT Store. In the distant future, two groups of soldiers battle for control of the least desirable piece of real estate in the known universe: a box canyon in the middle of nowhere. Red Vs Blue Season 9 Download Free Mp3 Song. Red Vs Blue Season 10 OST. Mp3tunes is a major music search engine only, and does not actually host any. They have them for download on iTunes. Obviously Season 10 is not out yet but I assume the others are. But type Red Vs Blue not RvB, you'll get all the results. Google Drive. Buy The Original Soundtrack to support the artists. Related Soundtracks. Blue: Season 13 Soundtrack. 5 (Original Soundtrack & Score) Rick and Morty Season 2 Soundtrack. Adventure Time: Come Along with Me (Original Soundtrack). Round One- Red Vs Blue Season 9 Soundtrack By Jeff Williams (feat. Lamar Hall) mp3 Duration: 03:38 min| Quality: Good Download.
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Season 9 Wow
This page is for the YMMV tropes of Red vs. Blue.
Red Vs Blue All Seasons
Arc-Specific
- Red vs. Blue: The Blood Gulch Chronicles: Seasons 1-5 plus 'Out of Mind'
- Red vs. Blue: The Recollection: Seasons 6-8 plus 'Recovery One' and 'Relocated'
- Red vs. Blue: The Project Freelancer Saga: Seasons 9-10
- Red vs. Blue: The Chorus Trilogy: Seasons 11-13
- Red vs. Blue: Season 14: Season 14
- Red vs. Blue: Season 15: Season 15
Red Vs Blue Season 9 Soundtrack Free Download 2017
The Shisno Paradox
- Author's Saving Throw: One of the biggest complaints about Season 15 was the frequent use of references and meta humor. While this season does still have jokes of this type, they're not used nearly as much.
- Additionally, the complaint that Season 15 was standalone and not related to any larger arcs was responded to in that not only The Shisno Paradox will be a multi-season arc stretching over at least two seasons, but that Arc Welding would later reveal Loco's time machine in Season 15 was the result of Chrovos.
- Some fans complained about Season 16 introducing truly supernatural elements into the series in the form of the Cosmic Powers went against the previously grounded sci-fi elements seen in previous seasons. It's eventually revealed that the Cosmic Powers are actually hyper-advanced A.I.s perpetuating a God Guise.
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- Broken Base: While the previous two seasons were already Contested Sequels, The Shisno Paradox fractured things only seven episodes in. Dissers disliked the show, saying it was ditching grounded sci-fi and increased drama for a Denser and Wackier route that even includes a live-action character. Others pointed out the Blood Gulch Chronicles were equally silly, the comedy is on point, and the surreal and unpredictable plot is making things more interesting.
- Characterization was also a contested point, with most regarding Tucker, who was back at being a egocentric Casanova Wannabe. Claims of derailment and ignoring development were raised, yet fans and Joe Nicolosi himself claimed that while Tucker evolved and became a leader because he stood up for the task, him being a self-centered womanizer never left, only got downplayed. Once he was paired with Sister, there was reason for those flaws to resurface, things to go wrong, and eventually Sister call Tucker out.
- Hilarious in Hindsight: Episode 11 has an angry Atlus venting off by firing energy beams at a moon, and the last one shatters part of it, just like on RWBY. Come Volume 6 of that show, and Remnant's cracked moon apparently was caused by a god throwing a fit.
- Epsilon-Church having done a God Guise while in the form of a monitor during Revelation becomes even more hilarious when it's revealed that the Cosmic Powers are Monitors themselves.
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- Internet Backdraft: Season 16 being released only on Rooster Teeth's website. Aside from the justifiable complaint of RT.com not having subtitles (a problem for non-native English speakers and deaf viewers), it's mostly just people griping that they're not getting the show on YouTube. It even led to a special PSA. The YT viewers only stopped complaining once the whole season was uploaded at once the same day the next one started in 2019.
- Moral Event Horizon: Genkins blatantly goes flying over this when he kills Huggins by sending her into a black hole, of which Huggins already has an intense fear of due to one having killed her parents.
- Older Than They Think: Yes, the Blood Gulch Chronicles could (and did) get as insanely goofy as this season did. The following season downright lampshades this in the second episode, as during a Mental Time Travel scene, Grif states 'we do weird shit all the time.'
- Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: In Season 15, many viewers disliked Jax Jones and saw him as an annoying guy who only liked to deliver gratuitous movie references. His appearances in Season 16, as a Prima Donna Director with a Hair-Trigger Temper, were much better received.
- Scapegoat Creator: Joe Nicolosi has come under heavy fire from the detractors of the season, with the blame for inconsistencies and plot points placed solely on him. Unlike Season 15 however, he actually has a co-writer this season: Jason Weight. Despite being co-writer, Nicolosi is the one who more often than not gets the blame.note To both Nicolosi and Weight's credit, though, they've been very vocal about taking criticism into account when moving forward. And when Nicolosi had to depart from Season 17 due to other commitments, some viewers still didn't feel fully relieved on seeing the disliked showrunner leave, instead feeling sympathy in that he at least should've been able to finish the story arc he started.
- Seasonal Rot: As part of the unfortunate trend where every season after 13 seems to be more badly received than its predecessor, many fans were not kind to Season 16, deeming it as poorly conceived in its Denser and Wackier approach while having major pacing problems and possible derailing of the characters.
- Spiritual Adaptation: The focus on space gods and Magitek, combined with a comedic bent, and the usual brightly colored armor already present in the show, makes for a very present Thor: Ragnarok feel. Kalirama's introduction even has a similar tone to Hela's in the film, while the score of the season sounds almost lifted directly from the movie's soundtrack.
- Visual Effects of Awesome: The season's introduction, which shows Muggins' flight back to Starseeds, is absolutely gorgeous.
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Singularity
- Crosses the Line Twice:
- It really says something to the quality of writing for Singularity when Wash shooting Donut from all the way back during Recreation is successfully turned into a hilarious Running Gag here.
- Relatedly, Genkins summarizing the Director's efforts in creating Tex to replace Allison as 'the robot equivalent of a body pillow' during 'Finally'.
- Evil Is Sexy: Donut downright describes Chrovos as having turned into 'a big and sexy frightening lady'. Viewers reacted the same way, with Lee Eddy's portrayal helping a lot.
- Fanfic Fuel: Practically turned Up to Eleven. Not only are there the countless alternative timelines created within the Everwhen by Genkins' meddling, but there's also Carolina's time while re-enlisted as a common foot soldier in the UNSC, Lopez's journeys while lost in space for countless millions of years, and Donut's plans for exploring the universe on his own.
- He Really Can Act: While Dan Godwin's performance as Donut has never been necessarily seen as bad throughout the series, many viewers have been very impressed with his voicework this season as Donut has taken charge and become a more assertive character (along with forming an Odd Friendship with Wash).
- Like You Would Really Do It: Lopez being permanently lost in outer space via jumping into a black hole while within the Labyrinth. Very few fans, if any, were that surprised to see Lopez pop back up near the end of the season finale, especially after Huggins' 'death' had previously shown that black holes in the RvB verse loop time backwards to the Big Bang.
- Memetic Mutation: Wash's enraged yell during 'The Not-So-Good Ol' Days' has quickly become a popular forum reaction image within the Rooster Teeth fandom.
- One-Scene Wonder: Like with Season 15, but to an even greater extent, the entirety of Project Freelancer shown through 'The Not-So-Good Ol' Days'note had viewers screaming ecstatically.
- Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Chrovos and Genkins were previously deemed as boring antagonists during The Shisno Paradox, especially because of their limited screentime (the latter is only revealed as a villain in the final two episodes). Come the next season, both are on the spotlight from the get-go and most fans seem to prefer how they're employed in amusing ways, particularly Chrovos' new characterization as a condescending woman (who is also vaguely maternal towards Donut, strangely enough) voiced by fan favorite Lee Eddy.
- Surprisingly Improved Sequel: Much to the pleasant surprise of the audience, Singularity has quickly become the most beloved season in the series since The Chorus Trilogy, with the main complaintsnote being seen as largely inconsequential in the face of the hilarious comedy, clever story, improved pacing, Character Rerailment, impressive animation (again, for the most part), and overall great use of previously ignored/shelved characters and pairings.
- They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character: Probably one of the most vocal criticisms of the season is that both Alpha-Church and Delta weren't given significant roles in the story aside from some relatively brief gags.
- Win Back the Crowd: Even if it directly followed the story of its very divisive predecessor, Singularity has evaded similar vitriol, with the vast majority of viewers liking the comedy, screentime given to usually neglected characters/pairings, and story directions. What certainly helps is that after a whole season of build-up, the stakes and antagonists were set right away in this season.
- Visual Effects of Awesome: The fight between Present!Carolina and Past!Carolina within the Labyrinth is generally seen as some of the best combat-related animation used in the show since the fight scenes in Season 13.
Series-Wide
- Alternate Character Interpretation: Church gets some of this on several levels.
- How does he really feel about his teammates? Despite his repeated declarations of hatred towards all of the Blood Gulch Crew, he does seem to care about other blues at least a little bit. Notably, when Caboose gets shot in Season 5, he lets out an honest Big 'NO!', and he seemed to despise him the most.
- Did Alpha-Church really died not believing himself to be an AI? Perhaps yes. Perhaps he knew it to be true, but he was simply in denial.Or perhaps he fully realised this, and his last words were simply an attempt to calm himself down before pulling off a Heroic Sacrifice, or even just a grim joke?
- While this is something of an existential question, how much does Epsilon have to do with Church's previous incarnation? Is he a legitimate reincarnation, or is he just someone who started to resemble Church after letting some of his memories sink in?
- Archive Panic: Along with the first 13 seasons on Netflix (and the following three also on DVD), every episode - plus the miniseries and many of the PSAs - is available on Rooster Teeth's website, with the ones prior to Season 17 also on the series' own YouTube channel! Of course it's over 300 episodes, resulting in at least one whole day of footage, so binging all at once is not recommended.
- Base-Breaking Character: Agent Carolina. One sides sympathizes with her, pointing how she was the victim of the Director's manipulations as well as betrayal by her teammates. They also appreciate her relationship with York and were saddened that they were never able to get together. The other side hates her for being a Jerkass in the present day to the Reds and Blues and blames her for everything that went wrong with Project Freelancer, even though all of it wasn't her fault. The later seasons have made her much more well-loved, however, as she Took a Level in Kindness, seeing the Blood Gulch Crew as her new family, and outright fears them dying (and even saw themdie in Santa's vision). And in Season 15, she seems to have become just as crazy as the crew.
- In a more played-straight example, VIC's quirky and bizarre nature makes viewers find him either hilarious or unbearably annoying.
- Better Than Canon: Many fans consider the increasingly dark and intricate plots to be better than those of Halo.
- Broken Base:
- The Season 13 PSA about trigger warnings resulted in a pretty instant, pretty messy split between three camps: Those who felt the episode was hilarious for lampooning the Political Correctness Gone Mad tendencies of some trigger warning users (As well as pointing out how these people make it hard to take real triggers seriously thanks to their overusage of them for mundane things), those who don't find the jokes funny due to the reason behind trigger warnings in the first placenote , and those who didn't care either way for the episode, but found it in poor taste to release something so controversial despite knowing and lampshading the Internet Backdraft it would cause, given RT's own very anti-politics-on-site nature. Then there's the smaller camp who found the intense reactions from both sides ridiculously over sensitive or hypocritical, regardless of if they themselves liked or disliked the video AND regardless of their own opinion on trigger warnings.
- When the series should have ended, if it should've ended at all. Some say it should've ended at Season 5, since it gives a sincerely sad ending to a hilarious series about how pointless everything was. Others say Season 10, with the lore and formula having been deconstructed and reconstructed, backstory having been explained, and characters having been pushed to their limits. Still others say Season 13, with The Chorus Trilogy giving fresh air to the franchise, proving it can work in an overall new setting, and ending with the death of what is essentially the show's main character. Season 14 was controversial in and of itself, but some say Vic's goodbye speech would've been an acceptable ending. And of course, others are happy that the series is still ongoing.
- The biggest split thus far has been between those who like the series for the military-themed dialogue-focused comedy of the Blood Gulch Chronicles (particularly Seasons 4 and 5) versus those who prefer the action-thriller direction and deeper plot that Season 6 and beyond have adopted.
- Ever since Season 15, is Joe Nicolosi doing a good job as showrunner, or is he derailing the characters and the meta comedy and unusual plot choices he's added in are harmful? And related to the above, the dissers are often those who preferred the plot-heavy seasons while the show is leaning back towards the comedy.
- On a more downplayed note, whether or not Donut should've stayed dead after Wash 'killed' him in Season 7. While there's a general consensus that Donut is still hilarious and it's overall nice to have him as part of the Blood Gulch Crew, some have complained that the irritating trend of fans almost never taking characters' deaths at face value in this series wouldn't have become as nearly apparent if Donut had just stayed dead the first time around. Naturally, others disagree on this.
- Complete Monster:
- Sigma, representing the Alpha's ambition and creativity, is the most evil AI in the Meta. Interested in becoming human, Sigma gradually took over the mind of Agent Maine and increased his violence. He also manipulated Agent Carolina into getting two AI, leading to a mental breakdown, and helped torture the Alpha. Using Maine, Sigma stole Carolina's AI before nearly killing her. As part of the Meta, Sigma hunted down other Freelancer's for their equipment and AI. The AI would be forcibly implanted into the Meta, whether they were willing or not. He also slaughtered multiple simulation teams as well as any recovery agents encountered. In a final bid to steal the Alpha, Sigma and the Meta attacked Freelancer Command, killing everyone stationed there and cornering and almost killing Agent Washington. Even with his destruction by EMP, Sigma's manipulation ensured that the broken Maine would continue to act as the Meta.
- Chairman Malcom Hargrove is the corrupt CEO of Charon Industries. Using his position, Hargrove illegally used UNSC soldiers as a private security force. Starting up investigation against Project Freelancer, Hargrove used it to take Freelancer's technology for his own use while arresting anyone involved in the project, even going as far as releasing a serial killer from prison to help him. Finding alien artifacts on the planet Chorus, he hired a group of Space Pirates to kill everyone on the planet by manipulating them into a Civil War. He sent ships containing cargo for the mercenaries to use to the planet, where the mercs killed everyone on the ship and steal the cargo for their own use. When the Reds and Blues got involved, Hargrove took advantage by having them escalate the conflict with the intention to kill them when they were no longer necessary. When the mission was jeopardized, he threatened to kill his lead mercs by sending a new agent to finish the job. When exposed, he decided to kill as many of the people as possible out of spite rather than surrender.
- Felix, real name Isaac Gates is a Psycho for Hire with a love for killing. When he fought in the Great War, he never showed any mercy to his enemies, even those that were trying to surrender. When one of his teammates, Locus, was broken by the war, Felix kept him from getting help and molded him into his partner. Hired to create a Civil War on the planet Chorus, the mercenary took pleasure in infiltrating one the sides while he was leading them to their deaths. He also led the raid on a prison ship where the entire crew is killed and the prisoners who are not worthy to join forces with him ejected from the ship. Hearing about the Purge, he was unable to resist being the one to personally kill off everyone, showing that he doesn't care about the orders and more about just killing for the hell of it, perfectly willing to sacrifice his own men to do so. When the Purge temple was destroyed, Felix pointlessly went after the Reds and Blues just so he can kill them.
- Genkins was part of a false pantheon of gods, 'The Cosmic Powers', meant to trick other species into subservience. Desiring true godhood, he joined forces with Chrovos to remake the universe In Their Own Image. He proceeded to help manipulate the Reds and Blues into causing a Time Crash, going as far as to exploit Wash's PTSD he gained from his neck injury and generating a mini black hole to sadistically murder Huggins when she tried to interfere. After the time crash, Genkins traveled around the time stream to cause further paradoxes to further weaken Chrovos's prison. Eventually, Genkins steals Chrovos's power to kill them before trapping the Reds and Blues in Labyrinth to torture them to death.
- Contested Sequel: The three most recent seasons have unfortunately developed this reputation, though for varying reasons: Season 14 dropped continuing the plot in lieu of exploring other stories through an anthology, Season 15 was criticized for wasted potential and such, and Season 16 got a controversial reputation for going on a very different route than any of the previous seasons.
- Crazy Awesome:
- Sarge. His plans generally make no logical sense, yet tend to bring surprisingly good results once he gets to execute them. Most notably, he managed to catch Agent Washington at gunpoint by disguising himself as a cardboard imitation of himself and managed to kill the Meta by tying a car to him and tossing it down from the cliff.
- North Dakota, while more or less sane, gets this reputation In-Universe for his unconventional battle tactics such as using the upgrade that has 99.9% chance of killing him on the spot and pulling off a Guns Akimbo with sniper rifles.
Epsilon: North was a crazy son of a bitch. - Cry for the Devil:
- For all the Director's horrific war crimes, callous manipulation, large-scale Mind Rape, and callousness towards everyone, his love for Allison is his one sympathetic quality that reminds you he was once a decent human being. In the Season 10 finale, his breakdown into a hopeless, broken shell of a man is one of the saddest moments in the entire series.
- Despite his years of killing and ruthless pragmatism, Locus is a troubled soldier still suffering Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder after the Human-Covenant War, having been bullied into becoming a killing machine by his own commander and Felix.
- Ensemble Dark Horse: Quite a few, as to be expected of a series that's been running since 2003.
- Lopez, among the original Blood Gulch Crew. The ensemble cast is such that all of them could be considered main characters...save everyone's favorite Mexican robot. The sheer oddness of the concept, combined with his extremely sarcastic and fatalist mindset provide some of the best jokes out of all the seasons.
- Agent York and his AI partner Delta, introduced in the 'Out of Mind' miniseries. York's grumpy if amiable charm and Delta's general intelligence and Not So Above It All moments made them really stand out in a series that at the time was starved for competent characters. Despite the fact that both were killed off by the end of a miniseries that only lasted fifteen minutes, the writers seemed to agree, as Delta was brought back every chance they got and given a significant amount of speaking lines in most seasons after, and York received a prominent role with plenty of screentime in the prequels.
- Sister and Junior. They were introduced in the late beginning of Season 5 and didn't get much screentime or a lot to do by the writers, despite their potential to shake up the group dynamic. They were promptly Put on a Bus for the longest time, furthering the sentiment as both were presumed dead for years. RT even acknowledged how fans liked them in a deleted scene for Season 9. There's hope yet, as they're confirmed alive and well in the Season 13 finale. Sister did return for one episode in Season 15, and was promoted back to a main character on Season 16.
- CT, both the original and her successor had a comparatively small amount of scenes in the prequels, but when the extent of their tragic relationship was revealed that ended with one hell of a beautiful love ballad, it surprised and saddened many that didn't think the show could be so warm and emotional.
- More or less every soldier with a name in both the New Republic and Federal Army of Chorus, and even some unnamed ones such as the medic girl who occasionally spoke. In particular, the entire rookie squad, and of those, Katie Jensen received the most attention for her Adorkable qualities. The other standout is Dr. Emily Grey, whose bubbly personality and psychotic madness was beloved by the fanbase, even those that didn't like the Chorus cast.
- Huggins, who for being chipper and winning over the usually abrasive Grif became very well-liked by viewers, even among those who weren't favorable of Season 16. What certainly helped was her eagerness in getting the season's plot moving along with still showing a darker side at times.
- Fan-Preferred Couple:
- Pick a Red Vs Blue fanfiction, any Red vs Blue fanfiction, if it even vaguely involves romance in some way chances are good that Grimmons will either be the main, secondary or supporting couple of said fic.
- Tuckington (Tucker and Washington) also become pretty popular in the fandom after the events of the Chorus Civil War arc. It helps that the two spend almost all their time together during that arc and at least some of Tucker's motivation to become a better soldier is to rescue Wash after he's kidnapped at the end of season 11.
- Carolina/York is very popular thanks to their interactions, even though the latter died before anything could truly become out of it. CarWash Washolina (Carolina/Wash) has also gained a lot of popularity after Season 15 Episode 10.
- Fountain of Memes: More often then not, expect Caboose to be quoted by fans of Red vs Blue.
- 'Funny Aneurysm' Moment: Caboose's Image Song I'm Your Best Friend was once a heartwarming single about Caboose's happiness about being near Church. Come season 13's ending, the song is nothing but sadness since Caboose will likely never see Church again. And he was already The Woobie to begin with.
- Harsher in Hindsight: Early in the series, Grif saves Sarge from a bullet wound to the head with CPR, and Sarge (unfairly) chews him out for such a stupid choice of medical attention. Years later, when mass shootings became a major hot button issue in 2018, Rick Santorum got into hot water for suggesting students learn CPR.
- He's Just Hiding!: With the show's habit of going from Death Is Cheap to Deader Than Dead in suitably serious moments, you can see why there's so many examples.
- Many fans don't buy the Meta's Disney Villain Death and believe he will make a reappearance. As of Season 13, Maine is confirmed dead but his empty armour is in the possession of Malcolm Hargrove. Many episodes were spent hammering in the fact that yes, he's indeed dead, and the Meta died the moment the EMP wiped out all the original AI fragments.
- The Freelancers get this a lot. After spending two seasons characterizing them with their own flaws and friendships that made them very likable, they're still doomed to die in ignoble, humiliating deaths and some fans really still hold out hope that some will make a reappearance, unlikely as it seems.
- At the end of Season 13, Epsilon defragments himself in order to create new AI that can manage Tucker's suit, effectively erasing him from existence. Since this isn't the first, second, or even third time an incarnation of Leonard Church has died, many fans were hoping this would be another bluff. Unfortunately for said fans, he's confirmed to be Killed Off for Real.
- The same holds true for Texas/Allison, even if Epsilon made sure to delete her from his mind, ensuring she could never come back as a part of him. The Director seemed to have another copy lying around, but all of his works were explicitly destroyed by his own order. This is just as well, since the memory of Allison is exhausted being constantly brought back.
- Some fans still believe Felix is alive against all odds and the show's established laws of nature. The temples confirmed he was dead as Locus was able to wield the key that could only be used by a true warrior once the previous was dead. Considering Donut already died and came back once or twice, anything's possible.
- You can also add the Triplets. While it's never stated they're dead, the fact that they were left on a barren planet with a trio of enemies that has a limited supply of food and alcohol, and Project Freelancer never bothered to send rescue, some fans hope they made it out regardless. Being possible surviving Freelancers and having a canonical lesbian in their group doesn't hurt.
- Ho Yay: Has its own page. It's even gotten to a point where the creators lampshade it outside the show.
- Iron Woobie: Tex consistently fails at whatever she's trying to do, not that it stops her from trying or being a badass while doing so. Same can be said of Carolina and Wash, who go on to learn from the past and resolve to put their mistakes behind them.
- Magnificent Bastard:
- Doctor Leonard Church served as the Director of Project Freelancer, who mourned the loss of his beloved wife. Founding his military program to test out the use of equipment with AI implantation in soldiers, the Director reverse engineered Split Personality in the one AI he had, the Alpha, to create fragments. The Director emotionally manipulated his soldiers to test out which AI matched which soldier and examined certain effects. The Director used turned one of his AI into Agent Texas, who would carry out dirty work for him. The Director also used his agents to steal equipment to perform more experiments. After the implosion of Freelancer and the apparent death of his daughter, Agent Carolina, the Director regrouped Freelancer, successfully hiding away the Alpha to keep him safe. When Washington rebelled and activated the EMP, the Director tried to use the Meta to stop him. Investigated by Chairman Hargrove, the Director argued that his actions were for the good of humanity, but submitted to possible arrest. In the end after a meeting with his alive daughter, the Director killed himself realizing that he could never bring back his beloved Allison.
- Aiden Price was the Counselor of Project Freelancer. The Counselor emotionally manipulated the agents to serve the Director needs, and as such knew many things about them. After the implosion, the Counselor helped coordinate both the Alpha's hiding and Florida's disappearance. Serving as head of Recovery, the Counselor used his agents to track down the Meta at any cost, and ultimately brought the Reds and Blues in for help. After his imprisonment, the Counselor joined the Chorus genocide campaign with Charon mercenaries, manipulating a former Charon employee to act as an enforcer without giving away his former occupation. The Counselor was the only one who realized that the people of Chorus could win and doom the operation, but was unable to get his allies to flee before being killed.
- Agent Wyoming, real name Reginald, and his AI partner Gamma, representing the Alpha's deceit, are the primary operators of Omega's plan. Hired by Omega to assassinate Tucker, Wyoming allowed a bomb to go off that knocked the Reds and Blues unconscious. Gamma manipulated an alien race into a believing prophecy, leading one alien to impregnate Tucker before being killed by Wyoming. After Wyoming sent Omega back to Blood Gulch to find a new host, he confronted and killed Agent York, and managed to escape Texas. Wyoming and Gamma reunited and headed to Blood Gulch to retrieve Tucker's alien son for Omega to possess and control the Covenant. Wyoming used his time distortion unit to cheat in battle, and when seemingly killed unleashed time copies to continue to fight. Wyoming's final push before his death was to reveal the full extent of his plan to get Tex on his side.
- Sigma was split from the Alpha's creativity and ambition. Sigma became very interest in becoming human, and controlled Agent Maine for his full ambitions. Sigma also manipulated Agent Carolina into getting two AI, just to see the results, and ultimately almost offed Carolina to get both of those AI. As the Meta, Sigma hunted down agents for their AI, but also recognized more pragmatic choices to leave them behind, such as to get more equipment or recharge power. Upon realizing that Wash and the Blue Team were on his tail, the Meta remixed a transmission to trick the Red Team into distracting them while he stole Delta. The Meta secretly tagged along to the Freelancer Command Center, and tracked down and almost killed Wash to take the Alpha.
- Memetic Mutation:
- 'It's a legitimate strategy!' (Camping.) Explanation
- 'That was the worst throw ever. Of all time.' Explanation
- 'Wait. That's illegal.' Explanation
- Moe:
- Caboose, for his childish personality and incredible display of stupidity. His upbeat nature and suffering a lot throughout the series make him endearing rather than annoying.
- Wash, whenever he can relax and have fun, especially so in his younger days in Freelancer flashbacks.
- Jensen's just so darn cute, even if we can't see her under the armor. The lisp certainly helps.
- This accounts for Theta's popularity. In a series full of Black Comedy, characters who are Too Dumb to Live, casual abuse, and general suffering, the fact that he's a cute AI with the personality and voice of a little kid is just precious.
- Huggins. Despite her having a darker side, many have found her adorable and perky personality to be quite endearing, to the point where she even proved to be quite popular among those who weren't a fan of Season 16 as a whole.
- Periphery Demographic: A lot of RWBY fans, especially the YouTube reaction/reviewer community, have discovered the show on the off-season when they needed content to react to/review. (Both are Rooster Teeth productions, but they couldn't be any more different!)
- Way back in the beginning, Rooster Teeth were surprised that the show had quite a female fanbase along with 'the video game nerd/geek kind of market' that was the target audience.
- Sequelitis:
- Lightly referenced in the Gaming PSA.Simmons: Join us next time for part 2 of our series: sequels.
Grif: Parts 3 and 4 are about that, too. - Despite this being jokingly referenced, Seasons 9 and 10 became much more popular than the previous seasons ever were, and the Chorus Trilogy is beloved by many fans for taking the series in a fresh direction. However, then came three divisive seasons, as noted above under Contested Sequel.
- Lightly referenced in the Gaming PSA.
- Tough Act to Follow:
- Reconstruction (Season 6) was such a drastic jump in quality with its fairly serious, Darker and Edgier plot and the intimidating villain of the Meta, that it's regarded as the go-to example of Cerebus Syndrome, and in the eyes of several fans just couldn't be topped. To the point most fans found Recreation (season 7) a step down in spite of the funny moments. But then Revelation (Season 8) delivered huge payoffs to the plot developments of the previous scenes, while also introducing the awesome animated scenes by Monty Oum.
- Then Season 10 one-upped the symphonic metal soundtrack, large cast of characters of both genders, slick, cinematic cg fight scenes that looked more impressive even than 8 and 9's, and wrapping up many ongoing storylines involving the Freelancers that looked like it could've ended the series then and there.
- Nowadays, the Chorus Trilogy is another contender, with its back to basics approach that set out to have a new plot that had little to do with Freelancer agents, giving a fresh direction that blended drama and comedy seamlessly.
- Win Back the Crowd: Fans who disliked the focus on action and intricate plot that dominated the Recollection (Seasons 6-8) and the Freelancer Saga (Seasons 9-10) were pleasantly surprised with the Chorus Trilogy (Seasons 11-13), for having more to do with the Blood Gulch Crew, a larger emphasis on classic RvB comedy, pulling focus away from giant action setpieces, making the action more grounded, and for bringing in a new, simpler plot that had little to do with the Freelancers.
Jeff Williams
16 November, 2012 - 30 songs - 67 min
Red Vs Blue Music Download
# | Song | Artist | Time | Download |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fragments (feat. Casey Williams, Lamar Hall & Barbara La Ronga) | Jeff Williams | 03:33 | €0.2 | |
2 | The More (feat. Lamar Hall & Sandy Casey) | Jeff Williams | 02:30 | €0.2 |
Now That We've Come So Far (feat. Nicole D'andrea) | Jeff Williams | 03:15 | €0.2 | |
4 | Terrify! (feat. Sandy Casey) | Jeff Williams | 02:31 | €0.2 |
Terminate (feat. Lamar Hall) | Jeff Williams | 02:02 | €0.2 | |
6 | Worst Lockpicker Ever | Jeff Williams | 02:19 | €0.2 |
Space Battle | Steve Goldshein | 02:25 | €0.2 | |
8 | Heroic Entrance | Jeff Williams | 00:45 | €0.2 |
C.T. | Jeff Williams | 01:06 | €0.2 | |
10 | Debris Field | Jeff Williams | 02:59 | €0.2 |
The Darkness of C.T. | Jeff Williams | 03:35 | €0.2 | |
12 | Ouch | Jeff Williams | 00:53 | €0.2 |
Land of Enemies | Jeff Williams | 01:49 | €0.2 | |
14 | Welcome to Maine | Jeff Williams | 00:28 | €0.2 |
Mental Meta Metal | Jeff Williams | 04:23 | €0.2 | |
16 | Mystery Blue Guy | Jeff Williams | 00:50 | €0.2 |
Pray (feat. Lamar Hall, Red Rapper & Sandy Casey) | Jeff Williams | 02:25 | €0.2 | |
18 | Training Room Showdown | Steve Goldshein | 02:54 | €0.2 |
Suit Up/Partners in Crime | Steve Goldshein | 01:07 | €0.2 | |
20 | Message from C.T. | Steve Goldshein | 02:52 | €0.2 |
Tex vs Tank (feat. Barbara La Ronga) | Jeff Williams | 01:26 | €0.2 | |
22 | Your Catch | Jeff Williams | 00:21 | €0.2 |
Twins | Jeff Williams | 01:01 | €0.2 | |
24 | Ballet Breakup | Jeff Williams | 01:39 | €0.2 |
Freelancer Implosion | Jeff Williams | 02:46 | €0.2 | |
26 | 100 Tex Battle | Jeff Williams | 01:49 | €0.2 |
Finding the Director | Jeff Williams | 04:25 | €0.2 | |
28 | That's How Voting Works (feat. Red Team) | Jeff Williams | 02:31 | €0.2 |
Come On Carolina (feat. Sean Duggan) | Jeff Williams | 02:52 | €0.2 | |
30 | Forever (feat. Casey Williams) | Jeff Williams | 03:41 | €0.2 |