Derpyfan
"[@eXAKR":](/1725550#comment_7472445
[bq="eXAKR"])
> I find it kind of ironic that some people here are saying that Starlight's current room (right) looks more immature and childish. In my opinion, it's her old, edgy room (left) that comes off as immature to me.
>
> To me, the way her old room was decorated tells me that she was an immature person trying to look and feel mature and grown-up. Instead, it comes off as someone who is trying too hard to pass off as a mature person by going over-the-top "hardcore" and "edgy", and to me that is a sign of an immature mind who's stuck in the twilight zone between childhood and adulthood, and is trying to forge their own path but doesn't have the experienced or learned wisdom to do so.
>
> By contrast, her current room comes off as being more sensibly-decorated, and with more emotional depth as well. By surrounding it with the things that have real personal value to her (such as the friendship mirror and the portrait of Trixie), she displays a sense of learned maturity with her new room. The décor is visibly much more constrained and the room is tidier as well, which again reflects a learned wisdom of constraint and organisation, further signs of her maturity.
>
> Indeed, if you pursue certain home and interior furnishing web sites (eg."[Apartment Therapy":](https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/)), more often than not you will see them highlighting homes decorated more philosophically in-line with Starlight's current room than her old one. Just becasue her current room has bright colours or lots of her favourite things (kites) doesn't mean she's immature; in fact, as it shows here (and in the many real-world examples you will find) it can sometimes be quite the opposite. The substance here is much more important than the style.
[/bq]
>
This.
[bq="eXAKR"]
> I find it kind of ironic that some people here are saying that Starlight's current room (right) looks more immature and childish. In my opinion, it's her old, edgy room (left) that comes off as immature to me.
>
> To me, the way her old room was decorated tells me that she was an immature person trying to look and feel mature and grown-up. Instead, it comes off as someone who is trying too hard to pass off as a mature person by going over-the-top "hardcore" and "edgy", and to me that is a sign of an immature mind who's stuck in the twilight zone between childhood and adulthood, and is trying to forge their own path but doesn't have the experienced or learned wisdom to do so.
>
> By contrast, her current room comes off as being more sensibly-decorated, and with more emotional depth as well. By surrounding it with the things that have real personal value to her (such as the friendship mirror and the portrait of Trixie), she displays a sense of learned maturity with her new room. The décor is visibly much more constrained and the room is tidier as well, which again reflects a learned wisdom of constraint and organisation, further signs of her maturity.
>
> Indeed, if you pursue certain home and interior furnishing web sites (eg.
>
This.