girlalmighty: (vm: keep chasing the storm)
큐랑해 ([personal profile] girlalmighty) wrote in [community profile] cityarcade2018-02-01 07:06 pm

MEME: Reverse Questions

Muns: Post here listing all of the characters you play (you might want to list journals, too, just for reference) or are thinking of playing.

Everyone: Ask the MUNS anything about the GAME or THEIR PUPS, because we all know the muns will answer when the characters won't. They can be specific questions ("How does he feel about her?") or general questions ("Why did you choose this pup?", "How do you channel them?", etc.) You can even have pups ask the questions, but ANSWERS are coming from the MUNS.

For the last time we did this one, check out the tag.

BONUS: For a voice post meme twist, use sites like Clyp and Chirbit to answer with voice clips instead!
eternaldaisy: vertigo (Default)

[personal profile] eternaldaisy 2018-02-03 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
First of all, ABSOLUTELY YES THEY CAN, I really love the two of them together. *_*

As for the first question, in order:

For Molly, it's definitely her sense of self, particularly in regards to her sexuality. That's a big, big part of who she is in canon (and thus was when she first arrived in Darrow); she's very comfortable in her own skin and confident and pretty shameless in that regard, describing herself with no self-deprecation as "kind of slutty." Being nearly killed and sexually assaulted during Bateman plot took a lot of that away from her, and she still has trouble seeing herself as particularly desirable. She's also a lot less naïve, for better or worse, and more capable of playing the political game, as it were.

Eduardo is definitely more confident! He's obviously happily married, and he has a business that's really his, something he essentially built from the ground up. That's all really a first for him, instead of his success being someone else's or him never quite measuring up to some absurdly high standard.

Lucy has lost a lot of her idealism. She's really been put through the ringer — had everyone she's cared about, with one exception, disappear (or die), including losing her brother twice over — and it's kind of taken away a lot of the drive she had before. She's definitely not the same girl who thought she could go out and effectively help change the world, or at least the country; a lot of that fire has really died down.

For Jenny, it's mostly a matter of having learned to adjust to the future. She came from a time when options for women's futures were really limited, and here, she doesn't have to choose between, say, getting a degree and getting married/starting a family, or that family and a potential career, or anything like that. Plus she turned 17 in canon, and now she's... years removed from that, so she's grown up quite a bit, instead of just thinking herself older than she is.

And Elvis is a little... softer, maybe? He's less prickly, less surly. He's never going to like people very much, in a general sense, but he isn't quiiiiite as rough around the edges as he used to be, or as unhappy.