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[Hide] (35.2KB, 588x465) Reverse >>99369
>nothing to distract the viewer from observing and appreciating the fox
A little bit of background is always nice, even if it's just blurry colors, though a minimalist one does help put extra focus on Averi, which is what the audience wants more so than the other details. When the artist only has seconds to grasp their audience's attention with the largest details, every little bit helps.
>>99371
Once an idea is on the internet, anyone is free to interact with it however they wish. How someone chooses to interact with a cute brown fox is entirely up to them, which is part of the joy of art, to take ideas from your mind and put them in someone else's head.
>>99352
Social media, more often than not, values perception more than reality, treating their leader's words as official, and ignoring detractors except when they're self-inflicting (confirmation bias). Their words only lose value once a higher authority appears and speaks against them, but who that authority is all depends on the audience's perception.