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Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing. (Maybe besides some knowledge of Wagnerian treatments, but Wagner slso wasn't halal for the hardcore Communists due to how much the Nazis enjoyed his stuff.)

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany if which none even survived. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

Geralt's katana sillyness: https://images.kinorium.com/movie/shot/239237/w1500_48798595.jpg

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing. (Maybe besides some knowledge of Wagnerian treatments, but Wagner slso wasn't halal for the hardcore Communists due to how much the Nazis enjoyed his stuff.)

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France oe Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

Geralt's katana sillyness: https://images.kinorium.com/movie/shot/239237/w1500_48798595.jpg

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing. (Maybe besides some knowledge of Wagnerian treatments, but Wagner slso wasn't halal for the hardcore Communists due to how much the Nazis enjoyed his stuff.)

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France oe Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing. (Maybe besides some knowledge of Wagnerian treatments, but Wagner slso wasn't halal for the hardcore Communists due to how much the Nazis enjoyed his stuff )

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France oe Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture". It's fundamentally foreign modern imports.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing. (Maybe besides some knowledge of Wagnerian treatments, but Wagner slso wasn't halam for the hardcore Communists due to how much the Nazis enjoyed his stuff )

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France oe Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture". It's fundamentally foreign modern imports.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France oe Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture". It's fundamentally foreign modern imports.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture". It's foreign cultural imports.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish (non-pop) culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish non-pop culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and foreign bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, which was often ridiculed at the time by the Polish fans, similar to how the retards at Netflix now gave a katana to their Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish non-pop culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and foreign bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish non-pop culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" is certainly not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and foreign bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish non-pop culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" it's not what you think if you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences, with Polish and foreign bands holding concerts legally). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

King Arthur is absolutely not the Polish non-pop culture. There were medieval Arthurian (Tristanian) works written in Czechia and Belarus (Ruthenia), but in Poland there were only some books imported from France or Germany. Just like "stories featuring Avalon and Camelot" it's not what you think when you think when you hear the phrase "Japanese culture".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences). Just to remind you it was so completely foreign until just few years before Sapkowski began writing.

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher is thus set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

Now, it's like to say "it's now also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

Now, it's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Chinese Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And the Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Asian Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And a Polish Witcher TV series actually did give Geralt a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Asian Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

And a Polish Witcher TV series did give Geralt a katana (actual screenshot: https://media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMWY0OWRhYjItZjU1Zi00ZDI0LWI4ODQtNTcxMWU0NWI2OWIxXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNzMzMjU5NDY@.V1.jpg), just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Asian Elf.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And a Polish Witcher TV series did give Gerlat a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to the Asian Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

(And a Polish Witcher TV series did give Gerlat a katana, just like the retards at Netflix gave a katana to an Asian Elf.)

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making people say the actually explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like being found listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making the explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur is hugely popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making the explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur id really popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making the explicitly Arthurian Witcher set in "medieval Japan".

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Arthuriana was introduced in Poland in the 1980s-1990s during the SF/fantasy boom and the fascination of the Western culture that wasn't suppressed anymore (for example during Stalinism one could be even jailed for things like listening to jazz and the beatniks were literally enemies of the people, while in the 1980s it was trendy among the youth to be completely openly and outwardly members of metal or punk subcultures without much consequences).

It's like to say "it's also Japanese culture" (King Arthur id really popular there nowadays, not just Fate and stuff but also scholarship), making the explicitly Arthurian Witcher a work of "medieval Japan".

1 year ago
1 score