drift fleet app
Oct. 5th, 2014 07:59 pmOUT OF CHARACTER:
Name/Handle: Greer!
Contact: aim: greerhopper; skype: ghostaiken ; plurk:
zhopa
Reference: Stick?
IN-CHARACTER:
Character name: Baroona
Character journal:
broroona
Series name: Vagrant Soldier Ares
Canon notes: Canonly taken from Chapter 174 but CRAU-wise, taken from after being "transferred to a new crew" (ie dropped) in CDC.
Species: Human.
History:
canon and setting.
As for his time in Consignment-his relatively brief span working there was enough to shake him. Presented with both a world he didn't know and a "military" that felt more like enslavement was enough to rattle him up and while he spent the first week on Ajna in relative confidence, events soon followed that made him realize the truth.
Fear and distrust in the CDC began when a live feed showing the destruction of an entire crew vessel was destroyed for attempting to incite rebellion. His subsequent "gift" of a photo of himself and a man no one should've known about made Baroona realize that the operation the CDC was running was less like a military and more like servitude. Greatly disturbed and scared by his return to what seemed like slavery, he chose to fall in line quickly, disobeying few orders even if it meant betraying the people he worked with.
It still weighed heavily on him, though. Having escaped slavery once, his new situation made what was once his proudest achievement seem worthless. Additionally, the lack of training given to troops left him practically useless in every mission and slowly Baroona began to convince himself that the CDC would be where he died. The longer he stayed, the more resigned he became, settling into his self-decided future and attempting to preserve what few aspects of normality he could. Mainly, he did this by making a new group of friends, primarily attaching himself to two or three people and devoting himself to protecting them.
It didn't really work. More often than not he wound up being the one protected and had to watch as his friends bore the harsh consequences for helping him. As a result, Baroona became even more withdrawn, amping up a playful front that both endeared people to him and kept them at a distance. He became sadder and a permanent feeling of uselessness and tiredness weighed him down until finally, he was suddenly transferred (ie dropped) to a new crew.
Personality:
Baroona isn't spectacularly smart but he is perceptive. He knows how to see through shields and mannerisms people invoke to hide answers and problems. He knows how to break them and how to aid them, quiet but gifted in saying the right things at the right time. Having been controlled, he knows how to do it-a skill most clearly seen when he eggs the Red-Eyed Swordsman into fighting him by correctly pinpointing his insecurities to irritate him. Likewise, he knows how to comfort. It's a skill he uses repeatedly on Ares and, again, is most clearly seen in the fight with the Red-Eyed Swordsman.
Out of anyone, Baroona's relationship with Ares is crucial to understanding his character. While at the beginning of the story they don't seem that close, as the manwha progresses and they start losing more and more of the people they knew, Ares and Baroona's bond becomes tighter. It's mostly out of desperation-neither one of them wants to be alone, with both of them saying so at different points. In that way, their friendship is symbiotic though it doesn't seem that way at first.
At first, it seems somewhat lopsided mostly due to their roles in the story. Ares, the protagonist, goes through the most emotional trauma and needs healing. Baroona, the support character, does just that, avidly protecting him and watching over him, going so far to create a disguise and follow Ares on his journey in the last volume. In fact, most of the second half of the series is Baroona staying close to Ares and supporting him in various ways. Not that it matters which way he does it–Baroona's presence alone is a stabilizing factor in Ares' life. And that's how Ares supports Baroona, as well. They both ground each other and that balance is what makes them so important to each other. It's what balances it out because just like Ares needs a stable presence in his life, Baroona needs someone he knows will stay around.
It's a need that makes sense when you think about Baroona's background and what he's been through. Not only is there the revolving door of people in the coliseum, but also the amount of people he's met while on the run and even in Temple mercenaries that have left his life in one way or another. Coupled with the loss of a significant number of his closest friends, it's easy to see why Baroona would want a friend he could depend on to simply stay alive.
Baroona has an odd relationship with death in that he accepts it but fights at the same time. To put it simpler: If it comes to him, he'll accept it but if it's something he can prevent, he'll fight it. While he doesn't actively go searching it out, he does realize that his line of work will eventually lead to it. There are a couple moments in the manwha that show this: three points in which he realizes he's on the brink of death. Two of the three times are when he's fighting an opponent that has either worn him down or outmatches him in terms of skill. In those two instances he remains calm and resigned. The only one he fights is the third point when he's facing an opponent he knows he can win against.
Unsurprisingly, his views on death shift when his friends are involved. Even when fighting for his own life, he remains calm; when his friends are in danger, he becomes more emotional, becoming knowingly reckless in an attempt to save them. Whether it's distracting the deadliest man alive or charging into a crowd of elite soldiers, Baroona tends to lose the cool he usually maintains when his friends are in danger.
Again, this brings up his distaste for those he's close with dying. While it doesn't seem strong enough to be a fear, Baroona states himself that he doesn't want to be left alone which directly contrasts how he acts at the beginning of the manga–personable but still distant. With that in mind, it can only be assumed that the prolonged friendships he formed (and lost) changed his views and made him value company and the loss of it more than he previously did.
Socially, Baroona isn't exactly a standout. He's quiet, subdued, and usually tends to keep to himself unless approached. In conversations, he prefers to listen and learn about the person talking rather than mention things about himself. He'll ask questions, make comments–but they'll all be focused around the other person. It's a rare occasion that Baroona talks about himself or his own life experiences. Usually he only does it when asked and asked seriously.
While there's no canon explanation for why he acts this way, the way he answers questions about himself shows that he probably doesn't see it worth mentioning. He's never shown to be ashamed of anything he's done, either in past or present so it's unlikely that his silence is based on a feeling of regret. Instead, it's probably more because he separates the past from the present and is much more oriented in living and dealing with the present. He doesn't bring up the past because he doesn't see past actions mattering more than current ones.
Reserved as he is, Baroona is more playful than cold. Once you get past his quietness, it's pretty easy to see. He's a trickster, albeit a subtle one. Oftentimes he'll exaggerate dumbness and sincerity, tricking people into trusting him using the air of seriousness associated with his usual demeanor to fool them. Canonly, he states that he's a liar and that's seen both in conversation and in battle.
Baroona isn't a noble fighter. He's underhanded and dirty, using any means necessary to win. He doesn't believe in honor but rather survival and will do whatever he can to continue living. In a fight, he lies, cheats, goes for the low blows and ropes in other people to help him. Nothing is above him; surviving is his winning.
Not to say that he doesn't have his own sense of pride. It's just less along the lines of a noble "warrior" and more in tune with being proud of what he can accomplish. He knows he can easily kill a man and takes pride in that. He was forced to fight as a gladiator and he became the champion–he's proud of that too, never once showing shame in his tattoos or attempting to hide them. They are a symbol of what he's single-handedly pulled himself from and he's proud of that.
Unsurprisingly, a large sense of pride is easily wounded and Baroona is no exception. Despite his own perceptiveness, he still doesn't have the control to see when people are using his own tricks against him. If someone looks down on him, he gets riled up. If someone shows that they're better than him, his temper flares. While he can still keep it under control, sometimes his hold slips. A good example of this is when he fights Ouranos, another gladiator, in the manwha. As the ex-champion, his pride is already on the line to hold the title he takes pride in. As such, he loses his reasoning and accepts the Ouranos' challenge despite knowing how reckless it is and almost dies as a result.
Overall, Baroona's pride gets the better of him. Not so much that it's all-consuming, but enough that it can interrupt his usual calm demeanor. Yet even when he's irritated by someone's bait he never becomes bloodthirsty. A likely side effect of being a gladiator, Baroona knows the value of life having (presumably) taken so many. As such, he is the only actively fighting character in Ares that is shown to hesitate when killing and the only one shown willing to spare lives.
This distaste towards killing directly contrasts his own love of fighting, which is shown when he fights in low-tension battles (ones that he knows won't end in death) and while waiting to fight. In low-tension fights, he's seen grinning and sometimes goes so far as to almost play with his opponent. That attitude changes later on when the battlefield stretches to not just one war, but four. While the situation in general demands more seriousness, so does his new role. As the story shifts around, Baroona's role transforms into one of a protector where he's forced to kill in order to keep himself and others alive. While still not okay with it, Baroona knows that it's a mandatory thing that needs to happen and is willing to perform it in order to, again, keep surviving.
Probably the largest issue for Baroona stems from his time as a gladiator. While the specifics of his time aren't thoroughly brought up, one fact is: He had a "master" (probably more like a mentor) who taught him everything he knows and, by some circumstances, killed him in the coliseum. It's a fact that he never brings up and is only mentioned by Ouranos during their aforementioned fight. He freezes up when the subject is brought up and completely snaps when Ouranos pushes that his master's death was his fault–something he firmly rejects.
The problem is, due to setting of the fight and the nature of the setting, it is very likely that Baroona killed his master of his own will. While the choices presented to him would have been limited, there would have been different methods, suggesting that Baroona's insistence of having no choice could be a misinterpretation of the options available or, in part, denial of his own role in the death. I play it as both, with a heavy leaning on a deep-rooted and completely convincing denial that he did not kill his mentor.
The stretch of his denial isn't fully explored in canon beyond the Ouranos instance, but it does highlight how Baroona, in general, copes with things. Avoidance is the best answer–as seen in how he never brings up his mentor again, even going so far as to lie when asked about it. While this coping method can be a good technique, the extent to which Baroona uses it borderlines unhealthy in that he pushes things behind him so fast that he has no proper time to confront them.
From his time in the CDC, Baroona's aforementioned pride has suffered greatly. Due to his uselessness in both fighting and emotional support for his friends, Baroona has, for the first time in his life, felt somewhat worthless. Additionally, due to the nature of the CDC's "exercises", he has become a bit more withdrawn, though in a different way than usual-he keeps things playful and shallow when meeting new people, preferring to tease and inquire about them rather than risk trusting information about himself. This is essentially a regression into older behavior as it prevents attachments and thus makes kill orders easier to carry out.
Abilities: Baroona has no powers but he is very skilled in combat. While he primarily fights with his weirdo weapon (two daggers joined by a long stretch of steel cord) he's also skilled at swordsmanship and hand-to-hand. He's skilled at stealth, subterfuge and sabotage. Additionally, he's agile as hell, has a broad and extensive knowledge of survival skills and some limited knowledge of military tactics.
Basically, he's a skilled but unpowered soldier.
Augment Skillset: Pilot!
Sample: i'm sorry this thread is so gay
Name/Handle: Greer!
Contact: aim: greerhopper; skype: ghostaiken ; plurk:
Reference: Stick?
IN-CHARACTER:
Character name: Baroona
Character journal:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Series name: Vagrant Soldier Ares
Canon notes: Canonly taken from Chapter 174 but CRAU-wise, taken from after being "transferred to a new crew" (ie dropped) in CDC.
Species: Human.
History:
canon and setting.
As for his time in Consignment-his relatively brief span working there was enough to shake him. Presented with both a world he didn't know and a "military" that felt more like enslavement was enough to rattle him up and while he spent the first week on Ajna in relative confidence, events soon followed that made him realize the truth.
Fear and distrust in the CDC began when a live feed showing the destruction of an entire crew vessel was destroyed for attempting to incite rebellion. His subsequent "gift" of a photo of himself and a man no one should've known about made Baroona realize that the operation the CDC was running was less like a military and more like servitude. Greatly disturbed and scared by his return to what seemed like slavery, he chose to fall in line quickly, disobeying few orders even if it meant betraying the people he worked with.
It still weighed heavily on him, though. Having escaped slavery once, his new situation made what was once his proudest achievement seem worthless. Additionally, the lack of training given to troops left him practically useless in every mission and slowly Baroona began to convince himself that the CDC would be where he died. The longer he stayed, the more resigned he became, settling into his self-decided future and attempting to preserve what few aspects of normality he could. Mainly, he did this by making a new group of friends, primarily attaching himself to two or three people and devoting himself to protecting them.
It didn't really work. More often than not he wound up being the one protected and had to watch as his friends bore the harsh consequences for helping him. As a result, Baroona became even more withdrawn, amping up a playful front that both endeared people to him and kept them at a distance. He became sadder and a permanent feeling of uselessness and tiredness weighed him down until finally, he was suddenly transferred (ie dropped) to a new crew.
Personality:
Baroona isn't spectacularly smart but he is perceptive. He knows how to see through shields and mannerisms people invoke to hide answers and problems. He knows how to break them and how to aid them, quiet but gifted in saying the right things at the right time. Having been controlled, he knows how to do it-a skill most clearly seen when he eggs the Red-Eyed Swordsman into fighting him by correctly pinpointing his insecurities to irritate him. Likewise, he knows how to comfort. It's a skill he uses repeatedly on Ares and, again, is most clearly seen in the fight with the Red-Eyed Swordsman.
Out of anyone, Baroona's relationship with Ares is crucial to understanding his character. While at the beginning of the story they don't seem that close, as the manwha progresses and they start losing more and more of the people they knew, Ares and Baroona's bond becomes tighter. It's mostly out of desperation-neither one of them wants to be alone, with both of them saying so at different points. In that way, their friendship is symbiotic though it doesn't seem that way at first.
At first, it seems somewhat lopsided mostly due to their roles in the story. Ares, the protagonist, goes through the most emotional trauma and needs healing. Baroona, the support character, does just that, avidly protecting him and watching over him, going so far to create a disguise and follow Ares on his journey in the last volume. In fact, most of the second half of the series is Baroona staying close to Ares and supporting him in various ways. Not that it matters which way he does it–Baroona's presence alone is a stabilizing factor in Ares' life. And that's how Ares supports Baroona, as well. They both ground each other and that balance is what makes them so important to each other. It's what balances it out because just like Ares needs a stable presence in his life, Baroona needs someone he knows will stay around.
It's a need that makes sense when you think about Baroona's background and what he's been through. Not only is there the revolving door of people in the coliseum, but also the amount of people he's met while on the run and even in Temple mercenaries that have left his life in one way or another. Coupled with the loss of a significant number of his closest friends, it's easy to see why Baroona would want a friend he could depend on to simply stay alive.
Baroona has an odd relationship with death in that he accepts it but fights at the same time. To put it simpler: If it comes to him, he'll accept it but if it's something he can prevent, he'll fight it. While he doesn't actively go searching it out, he does realize that his line of work will eventually lead to it. There are a couple moments in the manwha that show this: three points in which he realizes he's on the brink of death. Two of the three times are when he's fighting an opponent that has either worn him down or outmatches him in terms of skill. In those two instances he remains calm and resigned. The only one he fights is the third point when he's facing an opponent he knows he can win against.
Unsurprisingly, his views on death shift when his friends are involved. Even when fighting for his own life, he remains calm; when his friends are in danger, he becomes more emotional, becoming knowingly reckless in an attempt to save them. Whether it's distracting the deadliest man alive or charging into a crowd of elite soldiers, Baroona tends to lose the cool he usually maintains when his friends are in danger.
Again, this brings up his distaste for those he's close with dying. While it doesn't seem strong enough to be a fear, Baroona states himself that he doesn't want to be left alone which directly contrasts how he acts at the beginning of the manga–personable but still distant. With that in mind, it can only be assumed that the prolonged friendships he formed (and lost) changed his views and made him value company and the loss of it more than he previously did.
Socially, Baroona isn't exactly a standout. He's quiet, subdued, and usually tends to keep to himself unless approached. In conversations, he prefers to listen and learn about the person talking rather than mention things about himself. He'll ask questions, make comments–but they'll all be focused around the other person. It's a rare occasion that Baroona talks about himself or his own life experiences. Usually he only does it when asked and asked seriously.
While there's no canon explanation for why he acts this way, the way he answers questions about himself shows that he probably doesn't see it worth mentioning. He's never shown to be ashamed of anything he's done, either in past or present so it's unlikely that his silence is based on a feeling of regret. Instead, it's probably more because he separates the past from the present and is much more oriented in living and dealing with the present. He doesn't bring up the past because he doesn't see past actions mattering more than current ones.
Reserved as he is, Baroona is more playful than cold. Once you get past his quietness, it's pretty easy to see. He's a trickster, albeit a subtle one. Oftentimes he'll exaggerate dumbness and sincerity, tricking people into trusting him using the air of seriousness associated with his usual demeanor to fool them. Canonly, he states that he's a liar and that's seen both in conversation and in battle.
Baroona isn't a noble fighter. He's underhanded and dirty, using any means necessary to win. He doesn't believe in honor but rather survival and will do whatever he can to continue living. In a fight, he lies, cheats, goes for the low blows and ropes in other people to help him. Nothing is above him; surviving is his winning.
Not to say that he doesn't have his own sense of pride. It's just less along the lines of a noble "warrior" and more in tune with being proud of what he can accomplish. He knows he can easily kill a man and takes pride in that. He was forced to fight as a gladiator and he became the champion–he's proud of that too, never once showing shame in his tattoos or attempting to hide them. They are a symbol of what he's single-handedly pulled himself from and he's proud of that.
Unsurprisingly, a large sense of pride is easily wounded and Baroona is no exception. Despite his own perceptiveness, he still doesn't have the control to see when people are using his own tricks against him. If someone looks down on him, he gets riled up. If someone shows that they're better than him, his temper flares. While he can still keep it under control, sometimes his hold slips. A good example of this is when he fights Ouranos, another gladiator, in the manwha. As the ex-champion, his pride is already on the line to hold the title he takes pride in. As such, he loses his reasoning and accepts the Ouranos' challenge despite knowing how reckless it is and almost dies as a result.
Overall, Baroona's pride gets the better of him. Not so much that it's all-consuming, but enough that it can interrupt his usual calm demeanor. Yet even when he's irritated by someone's bait he never becomes bloodthirsty. A likely side effect of being a gladiator, Baroona knows the value of life having (presumably) taken so many. As such, he is the only actively fighting character in Ares that is shown to hesitate when killing and the only one shown willing to spare lives.
This distaste towards killing directly contrasts his own love of fighting, which is shown when he fights in low-tension battles (ones that he knows won't end in death) and while waiting to fight. In low-tension fights, he's seen grinning and sometimes goes so far as to almost play with his opponent. That attitude changes later on when the battlefield stretches to not just one war, but four. While the situation in general demands more seriousness, so does his new role. As the story shifts around, Baroona's role transforms into one of a protector where he's forced to kill in order to keep himself and others alive. While still not okay with it, Baroona knows that it's a mandatory thing that needs to happen and is willing to perform it in order to, again, keep surviving.
Probably the largest issue for Baroona stems from his time as a gladiator. While the specifics of his time aren't thoroughly brought up, one fact is: He had a "master" (probably more like a mentor) who taught him everything he knows and, by some circumstances, killed him in the coliseum. It's a fact that he never brings up and is only mentioned by Ouranos during their aforementioned fight. He freezes up when the subject is brought up and completely snaps when Ouranos pushes that his master's death was his fault–something he firmly rejects.
The problem is, due to setting of the fight and the nature of the setting, it is very likely that Baroona killed his master of his own will. While the choices presented to him would have been limited, there would have been different methods, suggesting that Baroona's insistence of having no choice could be a misinterpretation of the options available or, in part, denial of his own role in the death. I play it as both, with a heavy leaning on a deep-rooted and completely convincing denial that he did not kill his mentor.
The stretch of his denial isn't fully explored in canon beyond the Ouranos instance, but it does highlight how Baroona, in general, copes with things. Avoidance is the best answer–as seen in how he never brings up his mentor again, even going so far as to lie when asked about it. While this coping method can be a good technique, the extent to which Baroona uses it borderlines unhealthy in that he pushes things behind him so fast that he has no proper time to confront them.
From his time in the CDC, Baroona's aforementioned pride has suffered greatly. Due to his uselessness in both fighting and emotional support for his friends, Baroona has, for the first time in his life, felt somewhat worthless. Additionally, due to the nature of the CDC's "exercises", he has become a bit more withdrawn, though in a different way than usual-he keeps things playful and shallow when meeting new people, preferring to tease and inquire about them rather than risk trusting information about himself. This is essentially a regression into older behavior as it prevents attachments and thus makes kill orders easier to carry out.
Abilities: Baroona has no powers but he is very skilled in combat. While he primarily fights with his weirdo weapon (two daggers joined by a long stretch of steel cord) he's also skilled at swordsmanship and hand-to-hand. He's skilled at stealth, subterfuge and sabotage. Additionally, he's agile as hell, has a broad and extensive knowledge of survival skills and some limited knowledge of military tactics.
Basically, he's a skilled but unpowered soldier.
Augment Skillset: Pilot!
Sample: i'm sorry this thread is so gay