The Antidote To Sephiroth Posting Is Barret Posting
Briefly

The article critiques internet users who engage in verbose and grandiloquent posting, likening them to Sephiroth from Final Fantasy VII. In contrast, it highlights Barret Wallace as an archetype for more direct and impactful communication, advocating for genuine issues without the fluff. It emphasizes that Barret posters, who present clear arguments for the common good, are harder to find among the noise of verbose posts that often dominate social media interactions.
You've no doubt encountered someone who posts on social media like they're Sephiroth from , right? You know what I mean. These people, usually to simp for billionaires, voice their support for AI taking over creative fields, or justify discriminating against people, love to make their arguments in the most grandiose, wordy way possible, as if they were the one-winged angel himself monologuing over Aerith's corpse.
The shame of it all is that you have to go looking for Barret posters on social media. Sephiroth posters, meanwhile, will come looking for you. They just spent 30 minutes coming up with a 300-character diatribe, and they'll be damned if someone isn't going to at least be subjected to it long enough for them to hit the block button.
Read at Kotaku
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