Imagining Brian and Connery is the same roleplay is absolutely hilarious. I know they're technically already in a roleplay together, but their interactions in this specific setting would be comedy gold.
Also, my suggestion when picking villains is to go with the aesthetic. I'm still not really sure what Rew normally looks like, so having him look like Scarecrow works pretty well.
So I think I settled on Reverse Flash, the one from the TV show, not the comics (I haven't read those).
Should I go ahead and post? I have a character in mind, she's one of my superheroes. (She's going to be severely pissed off that all her powers refuse to work and she's got this silly slow speedster thing instead...yaa she's usually faster than the reverse flash would be)
Stay Safe The Princess of Darkness
Hello! You? Yes you reading this. Have a nice day because you're wonderful and you deserve it!
It definitely isn't, @HarryHardy! I had more fun stealing the...special things from Maahes, Molly and Rew, but I'm definitely cool with the wings still being there.
Also, @Lezuli, I love Plice already! And my first thought when I read that Plice and Ollie were roommates may or may not have been the "oh my god they were roommates" vine.
His eyes, if they had been normal, would have widened as realization slammed into him.
I'm a bit confused, doesn't Jonathan Crane usually have a normal face under his mask? Is there some alternate version of the Scarecrow that's an eldritch beast and not a guy in a costume?
Bad souls have born better sons, better souls born worse ones -St Vincent
Btw, with the actual thousands of hours he's dedicated to acting in his life, that last bit of the post will absolutely be convincingly, well, what he's going for.
"For a short space of time I remained at the window watching the pallid lightnings that played above Mont Blanc and listening to the rushing of the Arve, which pursued its noise way beneath. The same lulling sounds acted as a lullaby to my too keen sensations; when I placed my head upon my pillow, sleep crept over me; I felt it as it came and blessed the giver of oblivion." — Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
Gender:
Points: 1373
Reviews: 59