Talk:Aang/@comment-24.237.110.201-20111225002843/@comment-3338975-20111225003617

I think I know how you feel; I felt much the same way at the end of the series. In my own opinion, Mike and Bryan intended to end the series with a feeling of nostalgia for the world and in such a way that they left their fans wanting more of Avatar and its world (which is much better than running a series into the ground by keeping it going so long that it fails to be interesting in any way because they've run out of ideas by that point); unfortunately, they turned out to be a little too good of story-tellers, and left their fans with such a profound sense of nostalgia that some became depressed by it (I was one of them, until I found something useful to do with it via expounding upon one of the ambigously developed plot elements . . . look around at my comments on this wiki, and you'll see which one), and with such a sense of wanting more that the fans turned around and pressured them into making more stories about the world Avatar, bringing us to the present day. "The Promise" and Legend of Korra ought to shake this out of the both of us.