Comments

Show 2 more comments
Date Uploader thefoxne Rating Sensitive
[hidden]

I always thought egg-laying was more convenient for the female, instead of nine months of carrying, I guess there's more risk of it breaking, but so can someone have a miscarriage. I wonder which it is โ”โ (โ ยดโ ใƒผโ ๏ฝ€โ )โ โ”Œ

[hidden]

Arufahoru said in comment #2580662:

I always thought egg-laying was more convenient for the female, instead of nine months of carrying

Here's the thing, eggs don't grow, so in order for a fetus to grow into a full baby inside of one the egg would have to be already the size of the full-grown baby.
The problem is that eggs are laid regardless of if it's fertilized or not, ao it would be far, FAR worse for human women if we laid eggs because it would mean going through pseudo-pregnancy and pushing out a full sized egg every menstrual cycle, so about once a month if we assume that it were to remain unchanged.

[hidden]

Context for those unfamiliar with the characters: Anya (the little girl) is the escaped product of human experimentation, which is implied to have involved plenty of unspecified cruelty towards her; furthermore, she has gone through multiple adoption attempts but was ultimately rejected by each family that took her in, up until Loid and Yor (the pictured pair of adults) adopted her.

What we're seeing her is Anya experiencing a nightmare flashback to her traumatic past, be it the cruel experiments or the failed adoptions, with an extra dose of sleepwalking to compound it.