From a lore perspective, Pauline's arc in the Mario universe fascinates me. Originally appearing in the arcade 'Donkey Kong' as Mario's girlfriend (before Peach existed!), her modern incarnation in 'Odyssey' feels like a full-circle moment. She's no longer defined by her relationship to Mario—she's a political figure, a cultural icon, and even a jazz singer. Her 'ending' isn't about being saved; it's about celebrating her multifaceted life.
The post-game sees her hosting festivals in New Donk City, bridging human and Mushroom Kingdom cultures. There's a subtle depth to her character—she remembers their past but chooses a different path. It’s rare for Nintendo to revisit legacy characters with this much care. The way her story intertwines with Mario’s history without being overshadowed by it? That’s storytelling gold.
Pauline’s ending in 'Odyssey' hit me right in the nostalgia. As someone who grew up with pixelated Pauline in 'Donkey Kong,' seeing her reinvented as this glamorous, confident mayor was surreal. The game’s finale isn’t about 'winning' her—it’s about mutual respect. She thanks Mario for saving her, but her life doesn’t revolve around him. That concert sequence where she performs in her red dress, with the city lights glowing behind her? Pure magic. It’s less of an ending and more of a new beginning for her character.
Pauline's fate in 'Super Mario Odyssey' is one of those endings that left me grinning like an idiot. After Bowser kidnaps her yet again (seriously, girl needs a better security system), Mario embarks on a globe-trotting adventure to rescue her. The final showdown in Bowser's floating wedding chapel is pure spectacle—explosions, a giant mecha dragon, the works. But here's the twist: instead of just whisking her away, Mario actually proposes to her mid-rescue, ring and all! Pauline, being the independent queen she is (she runs New Donk City, after all), declines gracefully but stays friends. It's a refreshing subversion of the damsel trope, and her post-game concert performance is a total bop.
Honestly, I adore how the game gives her agency. She's not just a prize; she's a mayor, a singer, and a legend in her own right. That final scene where she belts out 'Jump Up, Super Star!' with Mario nodding along? Chef's kiss. It's the happiest 'rejection' in gaming history.
2026-01-26 20:29:07
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Goodbye, Saintess.
Edelweiss W.S.
8.5
222.1K
Having an Awakenist as my wife meant enduring her monkish attitude toward sex.
We could only be intimate on the sixteenth of every month. Every detail—my position, rhythm, even my expression—had to follow her rigid rules. If I showed too much pleasure, she would immediately rise and leave.
We had been married for five years. Was I ever tired of this?
Yes. Still, I always gave in. I accepted these limitations because I loved her.
"The Saintess loves me too," I told myself.
That faith shattered the day I was sent to extinguish a hotel fire. Amid the flames, I found my wife pressed close to a man in disheveled clothes. Between their arms was a young boy.
“Alex… I’m dying.”
Amara’s trembling voice over the phone should have shaken her husband, but the renowned Dr. Alex Spencer simply replied, “Buy medicine and let me work.”
The world envied their marriage to the perfect doctor, but behind closed doors, Amara carried every pain alone. Until the day she received two verdicts: brain cancer… and a divorce she signed with her own hands.
She walked away, whispering, “This is the last meal I’ll ever cook for you,” leaving Alex furious and unable to accept the truth.
And when he rushed into a house decorated with flowers and candles, her smiling picture greeted him instead.
She was gone. He fell down, weeping like a child.
But something still told him, this was all a setup. That Amara was still alive and he won’t rest until he finds her.
Is Amara truly still alive? Read to find out!
This is the story of a woman deceived and killed just to claim things that should have been rightfully hers. Let's meet the main character, Ellaine Santiago, and how she faced a situation she could never undo. She became an orphan at a young age due to her parents' death in a car accident, leading her to live with her Aunt Amanda, who raised her until she reached adulthood. It was there that she also met a man who captured her heart, Dave De Guzman. They deeply loved each other, eventually planning to get married. Little did she know that this would be the beginning of a life-changing event, as her cousin Josephine, Aunt Amanda's only child, returned home.
Unbeknownst to Ellaine, Josephine's vacation plan had sinister intentions to steal and seduce her fiancé, Dave. Dave fell for Josephine's seduction, leading Josephine to plot Ellaine's murder to completely win Dave over. In an unexpected turn of events, Ellaine almost lost her life at Josephine's hands, falling into a waterfall and losing consciousness.
Presumed dead, Ellaine was buried by her family, and Josephine successfully took Dave away from her. Upon her return, Ellaine was ready to hold her cousin and those who wronged her accountable for her near-death experience. But is she truly ready to confront the people who were once dear to her and fight for her love with Dave De Guzman? Let's follow the story of Ella Santiago in the novel titled "The Revenge of Ellaine" by Jenny Agsangre.
"Every one action led to undesirable future, where outcomes were always vague, that was always the consequences."
When Paul Simons lost his childhood friend during the last days of September, he was devasted and put himself in great grief. Wishing to wake up from the nightmarish, horrible reality of September, hoping to meet Serina Green again that died due to an odd case of suicide, The case itself was suspected to be a murder by Paul, and it further flames the anger on his heart. Drowned by agony and anger, Paul woke up another day only to realize he came back to the first week of September, where both Serina and him promised to have a concert at the September Ends, which will happen at the end of the month.
Determine to fix the tragedic future, and to find the one who is responsible, he prepares himself to investigate the town before September Ends, but, Is the town and the incident as simple as it seems? Is the knowledge about the future is enough?
Venture as the suspense of the lurking mystery was surfacing in the town, what did happen to the horrible tragedy of September Ends, what was the cause, who is the culprit.
September End was a story mixed with romance, music, and thrill, every chapter will make you question; What really did happen? what lies around the fog of town, its dark secrets, and finally, The lurking shadow that was needed to get caught until it kills the one you love.
Rejected by her rich father, Sarah and her mother Helen moves to a slump where her mother sells her body for bread and drugs.
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A chance meeting with her father gives Sarah the opportunity she needed for the most brutal revenge.
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A fire outbreak, a second chance, Sarah finds freedom and meets Kunle. a man determined to show her that true love was possible and existed.
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The biography 'Paulette: The Adventurous Life of Paulette Goddard' wraps up by reflecting on her later years, which were quieter but no less fascinating. After her Hollywood heyday, she shifted focus to philanthropy and travel, embodying the adventurous spirit that defined her life. The book doesn’t just end with her passing; it lingers on her legacy—how she broke norms as a self-made woman in a tough industry. Her marriages, especially to Charlie Chaplin, get nuanced closure, showing how she navigated fame and personal struggles with wit and resilience.
What struck me most was how the author paints her final days—not as a fade-out but as a deliberate step back from the spotlight. She lived on her own terms, collecting art and supporting causes she believed in. It’s a satisfying ending because it feels true to her chaotic, vibrant life—no tidy bow, just a woman who kept evolving until the end.
The ending of 'Pauline S' is this beautiful, melancholic crescendo where the protagonist finally confronts the ghosts of her past. After chapters of drifting through fragmented memories and half-truths, she returns to her childhood home—a place she’d avoided for years. The house is dilapidated, but there’s this haunting scene where she finds old letters stuffed in a wall, revealing her mother’s unspoken regrets. It’s not a tidy resolution; she doesn’t 'fix' anything. Instead, she burns the letters in the fireplace, watching the smoke curl up like the questions she’ll never answer. The last line describes her sitting on the porch at dawn, listening to the wind chimes, and for the first time, feeling like she’s neither running toward nor away from something. It’s achingly poetic, leaving you with this sense of quiet catharsis.
What I love is how the author resists cheap closure. Pauline doesn’t suddenly become whole—she just learns to carry her fractures differently. The symbolism of the chimes (recurring throughout the book) ties back to her mother’s obsession with time and lost chances. It’s one of those endings that lingers, making you flip back to earlier chapters to connect the dots. I cried, but in that good, soul-clearing way.