If you’d need to rethink alternatives for your character it wouldn’t be worth it. Eventually it stops becoming your character, you know?
I’m liking your initial idea. I’m into it if you still are.as you said, it still gives an excuse for the two to be weary of one another.
Im cool with however long you need it to fit the plot. The winds of rebellion are generally blowing years before actual war, so I absolutely have an excuse to have my character be raised by revolutionaries.
I’m thinking it isn’t a average mindset. She was raised by a particularly dogmatic person who doesn’t represent the rebel leadership or their ideals on the whole. The person will just be a loose cannon with a deadly platoon and reasonable influence.
Now if you really want to spice things up...
Either would work for me, but Zoè is less “accept help from the oppressors” and more “shoot ‘em all in the head,” even if it is just out of misguided anger.
So if she helped your family, she would be seething about it at the time and would probably remember your character, holding onto some...
She’s going to Iberian. She will have been raised in poverty, the youngest in her family. Eventually her family will be separated by the war, where she is picked up by a band of rebels. She begins running messages into occupied territory to outright fighting for the rebellion as she ages.
Think...
yo @KennethPhoenix18 , do you have anything solid written for the war in the vatic union? it’ll play a major part in my character’s history and I’m wondering if there is any canon I’d need to follow
I was in a GURPS campaign in high school where we played a bunch of misfit superheroes in a 1940’s pulp setting. Occult magic, super science and evil villains abound. It was a very fun setting.
My character was Jeremy, a super soldier and spy created by MI6 as Britain’s ace in the hole. He was...