The Queen's Nose

The Queen's Mate
The Queen's Mate
Sylvain Wilde had been searching for his mate from the moment he shifted. All he wanted was to find his other half and live his happily ever after. Except, he didn't realize that his mate would be of a completely different species from him and that she would be an enemy he'd be willing to give his life for! _____________________________________________ Book 5 of the Mate Series! You have to read Books 1 - 4 to understand this one! Books listed inside!
8.5
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43 Chapters
Queen's Conquest - Warrior Queen's Harem
Queen's Conquest - Warrior Queen's Harem
Even though we live in modern times, the coven seems stuck in the Dark Ages. As the heir apparent to the throne, Zalindra is under pressure to marry in order to maintain the lineage's strength. Seriously? That feels so out of touch with today's world. Her true passion lies in honing her skills to protect the coven. Romance? Not a priority for her, let alone marriage. But everything changes when she encounters Lucian and Lorian. I hate to sound cliché, but it was a case of instant attraction. Just one tiny hiccup: they have no idea they're witches. That doesn't make me want them any less .
Not enough ratings
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38 Chapters
The Queen's General
The Queen's General
For 16 years Olina has been hiding in plain sight at the pack of her future mate. As a royal, she has known who her mate was since the first time she met him, even if she was only 2. Now it's two days past her 18th birthday, and the man she has loved all her life, marked another. As she reels with the pain of the rejection and marking, she returns to her original pack, her home. Along with her best friend and guardian, Waryn, who came with her to her mate's pack as toddlers, Olina returns only to find that her new plan of avoiding any possible future with a mate won't be that easy. Her mother has a plan, and as the next full moon passes and her bond breaks with Syn, it seems so does fate. But as she comes face to face with all shes ever wanted, she realizes it comes with a price. Facing a future unlike the one she spent 16 years preparing for, Olina steps up against a new mate, a new role in her pack, and a new enemy in the form of a familiar face, one who wants her royal bloodline to end at her.
8.8
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45 Chapters
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The Queen's Pawns
The Queen's Pawns
Hellion woke up in a room with no memories and later got saved by a man. When things unfold between them, she realized that the man she thought was her savior was actually the person who imprisoned her. She realized the truth, way too late and she was already dancing in the palm of his hands. "You're mine and you can only be mine." whispered the Demon King as she touched her inner thighs. Hellion whimpered softly as she tearfully look at his crimson eyes.
10
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91 Chapters
The Queen's Guard
The Queen's Guard
Mom cleared her throat and said, “I have an idea.” I frowned. “What are you talking about, Mom?” “I’m talking about I have an idea.” She stood up and leaned on her desk, saying, “We will hold the Queen’s Guard Tournament.” “I still don’t understand, mom.” “I propose a tournament with several tests, games, balls, bullfights, interviews, dates and parades. I suggest we go wild with different activities that guarantee the election of the new alpha kings.” “Okay… I’ll take the bait. Who will participate?” “Anyone who is an alpha or some equivalent to that. We put their names inside the sky crate so that destiny can choose the 20 lucky ones who will compete for the love of the future sovereign. The three winners will be crowned the alpha kings of the south, east and west. Obviously, the north is occupied by Alonso.” “And what will happen to Sokaris? He’s mine too, mom!” “I wouldn’t worry about him, Maddie. In my dreams, I saw him putting on a great show.” “What will happen if my other fated mates show up?” “Destiny will take care of it, Maddie. Your mates will be selected. But to win, we must give our enemies a mirage of hope that makes them believe they can govern.” “And in the end, they will be exposed to everyone, without us having to intervene,” Mom nodded, with a triumphant smile. I sighed. “If this is our best option, then let’s use the ball that is already being planned as the tournament’s opening event.” Mom nodded. Dad slapped his hands together and said, “Well… we have a tournament to plan and a lot of announcements to make. Let’s get started!” ________________ Reverse harem / 4 fated mates / Magic / Royal Lycan Family / Vampires
Not enough ratings
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17 Chapters
The Queen's Doll
The Queen's Doll
In Kingdom where women and girls are thrust into a life of bondage to be used as pleasure dolls for men and rich folks who could afford to buy them, a young, innocent girl of fifteen, green in life finds herself looking toward this life, with horror stories of dolls echoing deep in her heart, leaving her green eyes wide with terror. Then fate strikes and she finds herself in the path of another, though in a different path, but shares the same fate. A life in bondage. She has been made one of the most powerful woman in the kingdom, not through her making, but by the greediness of a mother, and the ambition of a father. She is the twelfth wife of a cruel old King, who kills his wives without hesitancy at the failure to produce a male child. Their path intertwine at the wedding ceremony, indoctrinating the young black haired beauty into her new life. They were not looking for it, but love came knocking on their door. It is frowned upon, it is an abomination, if found out their lives is at stake, but these young women couldn’t resist the calling of their heart. Is love worth all the hell they would go through?
10
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33 Chapters

What Merchandise Features A Big Nose Cartoon Character?

4 Answers2025-11-24 23:19:31

Walking into a comic shop, my eyes always get pulled toward anything with an absurd nose — there’s something about exaggerated features that designers love to plaster across merch. For the classic long-nose gag, 'Pinocchio' is everywhere: wooden puppet replicas, plushes, enamel pins, Funko Pops, and even novelty watches. Disney stores and online marketplaces constantly cycle through retro-style tin signs and figurines featuring his unmistakable profile.

On the slapstick side, characters like Goofy and Gonzo show up on T‑shirts, keychains, and plush because their snouts are so iconic. If you’re into sarcastic big-nosed faces, Squidward from 'SpongeBob SquarePants' pops up on posters, phone cases, and collectible vinyls. I’ve also seen 'Mr. Men' spin-offs — especially 'Mr. Nosey' — on children’s books, stickers, and pajamas. My favorite find was a limited edition vinyl figure that captured Gonzo’s beak perfectly; it’s proof that a bold nose can turn ordinary items into instantly recognizable, quirky pieces in any collection.

Where Can I Find Merchandise For The Long Nose Cartoon Character?

5 Answers2025-11-24 20:25:00

For a character with that unmistakable long nose, I usually start hunting in the obvious and the obscure at the same time. First stop is the official route — check the character’s official website or the studio/publisher’s shop because licensed plushes, figures, and apparel often appear there first. If there’s a big brand tie-in, sites like Amazon, Hot Topic, or BoxLunch sometimes carry exclusive tees and collectibles. I also scope out specialty retailers like hobby shops or toy stores that stock licensed merchandise.

If the official path fails, I go secondhand and indie: eBay and Mercari for rare or vintage pieces, Etsy and Redbubble for fan-made art and niche items, and conventions or Facebook collector groups for trades and personal sellers. A reverse image search on Google or TinEye is a secret weapon — it helps verify the item and track down sellers. Watch for bootlegs: check seller feedback, product photos, and packaging details. I’ve found some gems by setting eBay alerts and following hashtags on social platforms, and honestly, scoring an unexpectedly perfect plush feels like winning a mini lottery — super satisfying.

What Is The Alice In Wonderland Red Queen'S Origin Story?

3 Answers2025-11-04 13:18:12

I've always been fascinated by how a single name can mean very different things depending on who’s retelling it. In Lewis Carroll’s own world — specifically in 'Through the Looking-Glass' — the Red Queen is basically a chess piece brought to life: a strict, officious figure who represents order, rules, and the harsh logic of the chessboard. Carroll never gives her a Hollywood-style backstory; she exists as a function in a game, doling out moves and advice, scolding Alice with an air of inevitability. That pared-down origin is part of the charm — she’s allegory and obstacle more than person, and her temperament comes from the game she embodies rather than from childhood trauma or palace intrigue.

Over the last century, storytellers have had fun filling in what Carroll left blank. The character most people visualize when someone says 'Red Queen' often mixes her up with the Queen of Hearts from 'Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland', who is the more hot-headed court tyrant famous for shouting 'Off with their heads!'. Then there’s the modern reinvention: in Tim Burton’s 'Alice in Wonderland' the Red Queen — Iracebeth — is reimagined with a dramatic personal history, sibling rivalry with the White Queen, and physical exaggeration that externalizes her insecurity. Games like 'American McGee’s Alice' go further and turn the figure into a psychological mirror of Alice herself, a manifestation of trauma and madness.

Personally, I love that ambiguity. A character that began as a chess piece has become a canvas for authors and creators to explore power, rage, and the mirror-image of order. Whether she’s symbolic, schizophrenic, or surgically reimagined with a massive head, the Red Queen keeps being rewritten to fit the anxieties of each era — and that makes tracking her origin oddly thrilling to me.

Which Big Nose Characters Became Iconic In Anime History?

1 Answers2025-11-07 21:52:22

I've always loved how a single exaggerated feature can make a character unforgettable, and big noses are one of the funniest, most characterful examples. Fans often laugh about noses, but they do a ton of heavy lifting in visual storytelling: they can telegraph comedy (the boisterous sidekick), dignity and gravitas (the stoic antihero), or just give an unmistakable silhouette that you can spot in a crowded frame. Some of my favorite nose-forward icons span decades and genres, so here are the ones that stick in my head every time I watch or rewatch classic and modern shows.

First up, you have to mention 'One Piece'—Usopp’s nose is basically his signature. It’s playful, grows with his tall tales, and even becomes a gag tool for the series’ cartoony expressions. Then there’s 'Doraemon'’s Suneo Honekawa, whose sharp, pointy nose matches his snobby, show-off personality; you instantly know his role in a scene before he opens his mouth. From older, more comedic lines, Kankichi Ryotsu (Ryo-san) from 'Kochikame' is a classic Tokyo-mischief cop with a barrel chest and a face that practically screams mischief—his big nose helps sell that loud, larger-than-life personality. Inspector Zenigata from 'Lupin III' is another great example: his hooked nose and exaggerated features make him a caricature of obsession, the perfect foil to Lupin’s smooth thief persona.

On the more dramatic or surprising side, Leorio Paradinight from 'Hunter x Hunter' is one of my favorites—his Western-style nose stands out in a cast of delicate anime faces, and it plays into his brash but big-hearted persona. Golgo 13 (Duke Togo) is famous for his deadpan stare and angular, prominent nose that gives him a no-nonsense, threatening silhouette—pure old-school cool. 'Detective Conan'’s Kogoro Mouri has that classic drunken-detective look; the nose helps sell his bluster and frequent embarrassment. And I love mentioning Nezumi Otoko from 'GeGeGe no Kitaro' because yokai designs use nose shapes to push creepiness or slyness—his sneering profile is iconic in the yokai pantheon.

Nose design also traces the evolution of style: older manga artists used noses to indicate maturity, foreignness, or comedic intent, while modern creators play with noses for visual jokes or to subvert expectations. I’ve cosplayed characters with bold noses and sketched a few myself; it’s wild how much personality a well-placed bump on the face adds. These characters—Usopp, Suneo, Ryo-san, Zenigata, Leorio, Golgo 13, Kogoro, and Nezumi Otoko—show how noses can be funny, noble, sly, or heroic, and why they’ve become little badges of memory for fans. They always make me smile when they show up on screen, and I’m still fond of how something as small as a nose can become a core part of a character’s identity.

How Do Big Nose Characters Influence Character Design Today?

1 Answers2025-11-07 11:54:35

I've always been fascinated by how something as small as a nose can totally change the vibe of a character. Big noses are one of those shorthand tools designers reach for when they want an immediate read: humor, eccentricity, age, or even nobility can all be telegraphed before a character speaks. In my experience watching anime, reading comics, and playing games, a prominent nose gives a silhouette that sticks — it makes a character instantly recognizable in a crowded cast. That recognizability is gold for creators because it helps with merchandising, thumbnails, and that little hit of recognition when fans spot a familiar shape across panels or scenes.

Design-wise, big noses are all about exaggeration and silhouette. They break the monotony of round, cute faces and add visual contrast — a long beak-like nose implies smarts or scheming, a bulbous one leans toward warmth or foolishness, and a hooked nose can read as aristocratic or sinister depending on context. I love seeing how modern character designers play with this: sometimes they lean into caricature for comedy, other times they subvert expectation by giving a heroic protagonist a pronounced nose to signal uniqueness rather than mockery. One important shift I've noticed is conscientiousness; designers today are more aware of cultural stereotypes tied to nose shapes and make deliberate choices to avoid harmful caricatures, opting instead to celebrate diversity in facial features.

From an animation and technical angle, big noses affect rigging, lighting, and movement. Animators exploit a nose for squash-and-stretch gags, for offbeat expressions, or even as a prop — think of noses that fog a window, point the way, or knock something over. In 3D work, a large nose changes topology and how light catches the face, so modelers and texture artists must account for shadowing and silhouette flow. That technical presence feeds back into how characters are written: a nose that casts a shadow can make a character seem older or more mysterious, while a shiny, round nose suggests youth and comedic timing.

Narratively, big-nosed characters can be layered rather than one-note. I love when creators use that visual cue as a red herring — making an initially comic-looking character reveal depth, courage, or heartbreak. It’s a trope I see reversed in modern works where visual oddities are humanized instead of merely ridiculed. Also, because noses are so culturally variant, they’re now being used to express heritage and individuality in ways that feel authentic and respectful. At the end of the day, a well-designed big nose is less about the nose itself and more about how it supports personality, movement, and story. For me, characters with memorable noses often become fan favorites because they feel real and distinct — they stick in my head long after the credits roll.

Does 'Got Your Nose!' Have A Sequel Or Series?

2 Answers2026-02-12 09:41:52

The phrase 'Got Your Nose!' instantly takes me back to childhood games and playful teasing, but as far as I know, it isn’t tied to a formal sequel or series in the traditional media sense. It’s more of a cultural meme or nostalgic throwback—something parents say to kids during playful moments. That said, the idea of turning it into a series is kinda fun to imagine! Picture a whimsical animated show where a mischievous character literally collects noses, leading to chaotic adventures. It could blend surreal humor with heartwarming lessons, like 'Gravity Falls' meets 'Adventure Time.'

I’ve scoured forums and wikis, and while there’s no official continuation, the concept has inspired indie artists and writers. Some webcomics have toyed with the premise, like short stories where 'nose theft' becomes a supernatural phenomenon. If you’re craving something similar, 'Courage the Cowardly Dog' has that same blend of absurdity and charm. Maybe one day a studio will pick up the idea—until then, it lives on as a sweet, silly inside joke between generations.

How Did Voldemort Lose His Nose Before He Became Tom Riddle?

5 Answers2026-02-01 10:45:42

That's a pretty common mix-up, but the short reality is that Tom Riddle was born Tom Riddle — he didn't somehow lose his nose before he became him. What people usually mean is that the man who became Voldemort gradually lost human features as he pursued immortality and made Horcruxes. That process didn't happen overnight, and it wasn't about a single surgical or violent removal of his nose.

Over many years his soul was torn and warped by dark magic. Every Horcrux he created chipped away at his humanity; descriptions in 'Harry Potter' show Riddle slowly becoming paler, colder, and ultimately more serpentine. When he fully transformed into Voldemort — especially by the time of the rebirth ritual in 'Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire' — his face had become thin and snake-like, with slit nostrils. So he didn't lose his nose before being Tom Riddle; instead, Tom's body and features were altered as his soul corrupted, and that gradual decay explains the missing human nose. It's haunting to think how outward deformity mirrored inner decay, honestly.

What Is Killer Queen'S Double Life In The Manga?

4 Answers2025-10-16 00:05:37

You might be surprised how layered the whole setup is in 'Diamond Is Unbreakable'. In the manga, 'Killer Queen' is the lethal Stand of Yoshikage Kira, and its so-called "double life" can be read two ways: the man-versus-mask life Kira leads, and the Stand’s own multiple killing modes that let him operate in hidden, almost domestic ways.

Kira literally hides behind a quiet, buttoned-up civilian identity — he takes on the name Kosaku Kawajiri, moves into a normal apartment, works a mundane job and tries to blend into Morioh’s everyday rhythm so nobody suspects a serial killer lives among them. He uses 'Killer Queen' to obliterate evidence, turning anything his Stand touches into a bomb to erase traces of his crimes. On top of that, 'Killer Queen' has auxiliary abilities: 'Sheer Heart Attack', an autonomous heat-seeking bomb that pursues targets separately from Kira, and later 'Bites the Dust', a time-looping defensive mechanism that plants a miniature killer-stand into someone and detonates to rewind time when Kira’s identity is threatened. Those layers — the wholesome civilian façade and the Stand’s hidden, almost surgical methods — are what make his "double life" so chilling. I still find the way the manga balances the mundane and the monstrous unforgettable.

How Do Fans Explain Killer Queen'S Double Life Symbolism?

4 Answers2025-10-16 17:33:33

Killer Queen’s double life is one of those things that still blows my mind whenever I reread 'Diamond is Unbreakable'. I like to think of it in two overlapping ways: literally and metaphorically. Literally, the Stand actually splits its functions — the polite, almost elegant humanoid form that represents Kira’s day-to-day disguise, and the brutal, autonomous components like 'Sheer Heart Attack' and later 'Bites the Dust' that act on their own, hidden from polite society. That split mirrors how Yoshikage Kira compartmentalizes himself: a man who cares about a tidy apartment and proper nails, and a man who harvests hands in the shadows.

Metaphorically, fans often point out that Killer Queen is the perfect emblem of a sanitized evil. Its sleek appearance and clean lines make violence look clinical and detached, which says a lot about Kira’s pathology — he wants his murders to be silent and beautiful, just as he wants his life: quiet, ordinary, and unremarkable. The Stand’s bombs are ordinary objects turned lethal, which is a chilling comment on how danger can hide inside the banal. Personally, that contrast between domestic calm and explosive secrecy is what haunts me about the arc; it’s chilling and strangely elegant at once.

Who Wrote The Queen'S Gambit And What Inspired It?

3 Answers2025-08-31 01:22:02

I still get a little thrill when I think about how a chess novel became one of my favorite underdog stories. Walter Tevis wrote 'The Queen's Gambit' — the book was published in 1983 — and he wasn't a chess grandmaster, but he knew how to write about obsession. I'd first bumped into his voice through 'The Hustler' and 'The Color of Money', so when I picked up 'The Queen's Gambit' it felt familiar: lean, sharp, with damaged people who live and breathe a single game.

Tevis drew inspiration from two main wells: his own battles with addiction and the intense, almost gladiatorial world of competitive games. He'd written about hustling pool before, so swapping pools for chess felt natural — same rhythms of practice, psychological warfare, and small victories that mean everything. The book also rides the era's chess fever; the Cold War rivalry and figures like Bobby Fischer made chess feel cinematic in the public mind, and Tevis used that backdrop to heighten the stakes for his fictional prodigy. He wanted to explore loneliness, triumph, and the costs of genius, and making his protagonist a girl gave the story an extra twist because women were rarely the center of that particular competitive arena.

Reading it on a rainy afternoon, I felt less like I was studying chess and more like I was eavesdropping on someone's inward battle — which is exactly what Tevis was trying to show. It’s a gritty, intimate ride that made me want to look up famous games and then play until my hands cramped.

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