Character
HANZO GENERICO
Race: Human
Age: 24
Sex: Male
Sexuality: Homosexual
Relationship: Single
Height: 6’1"
Build: Tall, slender, pantherine.
Player
NICOLE ROSE
Nationality: American
Age: 19
Sex: Female
Sexuality: Heterosexual
Relationship: Single
Height: 5'4"
Build: Athletic build, confident comportment.
Personality
Nicole is a cheerful individual, an open grimoire of joy sprinkled over with pixie dust and sugar. Her endless pursuit is happiness, only the hunt ended years ago and the hunter’s still running. Ever smiling, she finds ease in connection, willing to converse with strangers as if long-lost friends. With that said, there is an self-indulgence to her amiable, oversharing nature, an almost addictive - and at times obnoxious - need to connect and, furthermore, be the centerpoint of the social network. She is nosy, a busybody armed with a virulent hero complex.
Her manic-pixie like demeanor has perhaps heightened in recent years; as she progresses steadily onwards towards post-graduate studies and joining the workforce, she does her utmost to fend off the the Grey associated with adulthood.
Positive: Accessible, Cheerful, Earnest, Gallant.
Negative: Flamboyant, Impulsive, Quirky, Tactless, Self-Indulgent.
Biography
Born upper-class in a lively, suburban neighborhood, life was as if designed according to Nicole Rose’s will. She wanted for nothing and, indeed, often received more than she could have possibly imagined in her life. Enrollment in all manner of expensive youth sports groups, expert tutelage, and all manner of gaudy decadence ensured that anywhere she looked, there was opportunity. Garbed in the fashion-du-jour, and with the type of confidence only a rich girl could muster up, she was, predictably, popular.
Popular in the same way the common cold was, regularly prying herself into the lives and social circles of others. She was ubiquitous, almost. In truth, that kind of social standing was a sort of stasis in its own right, thousands of trivial, meaningless matters of student drama hurtling towards her like an asteroid field.
And then, when she graduated, it was all simply
over. The asteroid field passed, and she found herself stranded as if in deep space. She had spread herself so thin across all those high-school lives that she had seldom ever connected. She was, for a time, alone.
The invitation to Terrasphere, then, was salvation most welcome.