stresstokens: Icon by @recadreuse (pic#17207037)
stresstokens ([personal profile] stresstokens) wrote in [community profile] etraya2024-05-31 04:01 pm

un: theball | text

Hey. Hope everyone's recovering from that stupid maze okay.

I'll just get right down to my point of inquiry. For a place that claims that we're meant to save the universe, I've noticed a pretty dramatic human-bias around here that strikes me as kind of odd, considering how diverse the universe actually is.

So I'd like to get a show of hands. Who here is from a world where humans are the only sentient species around, and who here is from a world with more than just humans kicking around? What other sorts of species are around? I'd like to know how much of it is selection-bias based on who's running this place and how much of it is them drawing from places that just don't have any non-human populations. I wouldn't mind hearing about what sorts of non-humans you have around either, but that's probably less important, statistically speaking.

Lastly... what do you see when you look at this picture?


[ Inserted is a photograph of a suave looking goblin man in a tuxedo with a pencil-thin moustache. He's holding a champagne flute towards the camera with his arm around -- something. If you've been infected by the curse, you'll see the goblin man's arm is around a black tabaxi woman, but if not, his arm looks as though it's simply hanging in mid-air. ]

[ OOC NOTE: due to the extremely low likelihood we'll ever get kalina in-game, the picture is just for flavour! if you'd like your character to be infected by the shadowcat and thus able to see her image in the photo, it would be due to any circumstance in which any of riz's bodily fluids were absorbed into their own body in some way, i.e. blood or saliva. feel free to handwave a circumstance in which that could happen, even if it's riz's blood lingering on one of the labyrinth's traps that then got into an open cut of theirs, a glass in the labyrinth he drank from that they then used, etc., etc.! Please see this comment for more information! ]
equivo: (pic#17106072)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-06-08 08:32 pm (UTC)(link)
So far, it's pilfering lamps and neon signs from around the city to make one big coordinated blinker to flash Morse code at the sky in the hopes they signal back. I'm not spearheading it, but I can drop a line to the person who is for you, ask if he can get in touch.

And I don't know if I'd call it suspicious, per se. I'm favouring 'forboding'. It's more portentous.


[ He's also assuming they're going to be facing the other city sooner or later. No one ever says forboding about a good sign. ]

It's kind of both, taken historically. Capes didn't start out with government sanction, so a lot of them concealed their identities to stay out of trouble with the law. Once the heroes got brought into law enforcement through the Protectorate, the practice stuck, mostly defended by the argument about separating public and private lives.

Villains still conceal their identities to avoid getting arrested, unless they don't bother having a civilian life. Even if they don't, there's a bit of a prestige thing in keeping your real name to yourself if you can.

Either way, it's one of the unwritten rules that even if you think you know someone's identity, you keep it quiet and you don't act on it.
equivo: (never had an issue)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-06-12 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
No problem. The more eyes on the sky, the better.

[ Maintaining a secret identity does have its downsides. Krouse isn't at liberty to tell Riz that he doesn't know the half of how complicated it is, or how much heroes skate by on those unwritten rules and the collusion of government and media - let alone how much 'justice' and 'keeping the peace' are buzzwords slapped over the real mission of 'maintaining the status quo'.

Not that he's bitter, or anything. ]


If working for the justice system isn't fighting for justice, then I guess that doesn't say much good about the justice system. It is complex, but things have mostly shaken out to be workable, as far as I know.

They do, yeah. A few resist the label here and there, but most of them don't fight it. It doesn't necessary mean you're cackling over an orphan grinding machine. Plenty of villains are just gangsters with costumes and powers. It's not in their best interests to make themselves into enough of a threat to the public that the Protectorate decides to devote resources to taking them off the streets permanently.

Which usually means prison, not a kill order. For the record. My point is, 'villain' doesn't have the connotations it sounds like it does.

Then there are rogues, who are just people who have powers but aren't heroes or villains. Mostly, they're trying to make money off their powers or stay off the radar altogether.
equivo: (mama raised me right)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-06-15 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess it's one of those things that seems normal from the inside.

[ It'd been a hell of a culture shock to adjust to.

Riz might have had an easier time than he did with it, with how quickly he's keying in on certain implications. He wishes he could tell him that he's right about the speed being incongruous, because it was pushed along by something behind the scenes - and it occurs to him that he could, once they meet up in person again. He'd have to make some edits around his sources, but he could really just do it.

Something to think about. ]


They did, but that's one of the catches. Beating up bad guys and tying them to lampposts for their crimes is just plain assault and battery if you're not an official hero. If you're a cape breaking the law with your powers, you're only not a villain as long as turning a blind eye to what you're doing is convenient.

Some people skate the line for a while, but they always end up either folded in or folded out.

You have to admit it's an efficient system.
equivo: (never had an issue)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-06-23 05:46 am (UTC)(link)
I imagine you'd need the exceptions for liches and dragons, among other things. Especially liches. Murder trials for the already dead have to be a whole new kind of complex, especially if the guy respawns from his phylactery mid-proceedings.

[ Maybe he'll file quizzing Riz about the fantasy legal system for some future occasion, now that he thinks of it. ]

And there's no conscription, technically. Not in the United States. But let's just say that depending on the power, you might be strongly encouraged to sign up. If not by the government directly, then by the prospect of ending up conscripted by some other, even less ethical organization.
equivo: (pic#17106117)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-07-01 01:26 am (UTC)(link)
I wouldn't have assumed it was just because he was a dragon.

[ Which is more of a mark in the gang's favour than it probably should be, coming from Krouse. ]

Although the only dragons I've ever heard of, personally, have also been huge dicks. One of them was a zombie, though, which might be a factor there. I guess we just have to keep our eyes out for the nice ones.

And people have tried cultivating powers. It doesn't really work out. Best case scenario, you get one or two out of a batch of however many newly fucked up individuals, and they probably have a power related to specifically dealing with whatever it was you were doing to them.


[ That's true enough to use as a generalization. The specific exceptions don't have anything to do with the topic at hand, and encompasses information Krouse officially isn't supposed to have. ]
equivo: (never had an issue)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-07-03 07:18 am (UTC)(link)
'Avoid dragon hordes due to ambient Dragon Madness'. I'm writing that down. Good to know.

[ Krouse manages to refrain from namedropping Thorin Oakenshield, firstly because the name probably won't mean anything to Riz, and secondly because being able to namedrop Thorin Oakenshield from memory doesn't exactly contribute to the vibe he's going for. They've got power mechanics to get into. ]

People even try doing it to themselves. Works even less of the time, according to the PSAs.

And sometimes, but it's not always that direct. You might get the ability to control water, or you might transform into a state where you don't need to breathe, or alter your buoyancy so you can float to the surface. It's hard to predict a power from a trigger event alone.

If you wanted to profile a cape, understanding the power is usually more helpful than understanding the trigger. Someone who can, let's say, manipulate emotions? That's probably someone who's insecure about other people, concerned about what they think, craves a sense of control. Someone with a ranged power won't want you up close not just because they're less effective, but because they need the distance between them and a threat as a security blanket. But you have to be careful about what you assume, because not all powers are intuitive, and a lot of capes hold something back.
equivo: (pic#17106076)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-07-08 12:55 am (UTC)(link)
I'd guess that if you knew it was coming, you'd be at least a little prepared to deal with it some other way than a power you don't have.

Correct, with one more deterrent factored in: if you try pulling that on people, and you get it wrong, make it too obvious? People frown on that. It's not sportsmanlike behaviour. Most cape fights don't call for escalating like that with long term consequences for your rep.


[ He would make a hell of a supervillain. Krouse almost could fool himself into thinking they're really talking shop, himself in the role of semi-benevolent old hand. ]

And some powers do suck. Weak powers, ones with complicated conditions to work, only situationally useful ones, ones with drawbacks that outweigh the benefits. Or the other end of the spectrum, which can be more of a problem. Powers that are too destructive to bring into play fully, or at all. There's not much you can do with a power that blasts lethal radiation over an area, for instance.

Then there's the case 53s. Powers that change people externally. Things that cut you off from having a secret identity, because it's hard to hide being made of metal or having translucent skin. That's a different kind of problem.
equivo: (pic#17106065)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-07-14 03:35 am (UTC)(link)
Or more pragmatic. As long as you're not the first to cross the line, you have more leeway in how you respond when someone else does it to you first. A lot more if you're a hero, a little if you're a villain.

I actually can't tell you what all the cases are. Some of them are still classified, others are hard to get a hold of. Most of them aren't important. It's just the numbering system the PRT uses for potentially parahuman-related anomalies.

As for if there's equality laws, I think that would depend on who you asked. Legally speaking, they're people. Practically speaking, that doesn't help much. There are a lot of ways people can find to make you feel unwelcome that don't count as crimes.

It's a hard life.
equivo: (pic#17106069)

[personal profile] equivo 2024-07-20 01:07 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah. I hear you.

[ It's shitty, but there's a kind of relief in knowing he doesn't have to get into it past that. He supposes the least life experience can do is abbreviate some fraught conversations from time to time. ]

And no offense taken. I'm not exactly a cheerleader for the status quo, if the glowing picture I've been painting hasn't given it away. Knowing most other worlds with powers don't work like this is really just the cherry on this particular shit sundae, but it's not exactly surprising. Some people have to come from the rough neighbourhoods of the multiverse.

That's most of the highlights I can think of right now, but if I come up with anything else that seems relevant, I can drop you a line.