Subject: This was very thoughtfully done.
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Posted on: 2018-03-14 17:38:00 UTC

Usually, when I try to apply the color pie to non-Magic characters, I end up going either monocolor or two-colored. I think that's because I've been looking more at the themes presented by such characters than trying to look at their underlying motivations.

I'll try to use your method for a few of my characters and aim for three colors, but I'm not sure I'll be as analytical as you.

Doc
I think I can get Doc pretty well, since he's still largely me. Primary color is absolutely white, and for a different reason than I've seen any other character in this thread be pegged as white. The saying goes "you're either a leader or a follower," and Doc and I are followers, hands-down. Referring to myself as a sidekick is a running gag at work, and I often go in early/stay late to do extra work, because to my mind, my time is spent better on the animals at the zoo than on myself; I am their servant. Translating this to Doc, I feel that he sees himself as servant to all the worlds under his protection, and doesn't have as much motivation to go out into HQ and spend time on anything other researching new canons.

But of course, Doc's love of books also has an element of greed and obsession to it. While cards themed with greed tend to be black cards in Magic, I feel that Doc's tendency to fly into a rage when books are threatened, coupled with the servanthood attitude from his white slice of the pie, which makes the books themselves his focus, make this attribute more red for him than black.

The tertiary color is where Doc and I diverge. I think Doc's tertiary is green. This mostly comes from the manner in which the both of us prefer to read: very slowly, savoring each sentence, and allowing the story to unfold itself at its own pace, rather than hurrying through and skimming. My full time+ job sometimes forces me to forego reading the way I like, during lunch breaks and such, but Doc is able to read my original, green way. (I think my "tertiary" has split into a tie between green and blue, since my job requires me to be proactive in planning and problem solving.)

So Doc is WRG.

Vania
Vania is probably going to be the hardest for me, if only because of the spoilers. Looking at her as I picture her base state, before she was recruited to the PPC, she was very friendly and outgoing, participating in campus activities and trying to get along with everyone. This mostly sounds white, but there's also an element of recklessness and jumping to snap decisions in her character. I think I'm going to cheat and say her primary is a relatively even split between red and white.

Tertiary is a bit hard. Her narrative has had a small element of showing people the ropes in a new situation. I think that would be blue rather than green, though I'm not entirely certain. Although I just noticed she's very near to becoming the same colors as Doc, so let's go with blue, but a very small blue.

Vania is WRu.

Paul
aka, the flashback character no one remembers or cares about. He does exist, though, in some of PoorCynic's writing exercises, here and here, if you scroll down to "2. Responding to criticism . . ." in the first link.

Since he's flashback-only, and was basically just a past antagonist to Vania, I very intentionally designed Paul to be Not Nice. That second prompt seems to show him caring for his Pokémon, but he's ultimately just acting that way because he thinks it will make them grow stronger, faster. (Didn't reallt write it that well, in retrospect.) It's the same rote, empty act as giving your Pokémon a haircut in the games to increase their Friendship stat by 1: it represents care and attention, but is really nothing more than a game mechanic. Paul wants to make his Pokémon powerful, he single-minded about that goal, and he doesn't want others controlling his life. Paul's primary color is easily black.

Even in the PPC, where he has actual, living Pokémon instead of game data, and can physically go to the Pokémon universe, Paul still looks at those things in terms of stats and numbers and strategy guides, because those are things he can know in his head, without being distracted by the open-ended randomness of the organic world. There's no subjectivity in his charge lists, either; there's only right and wrong. Paul is confident he knows which is which, and dictates it to the badfic accordingly. Paul's secondary color is blue.

For tertiary, weirdly, I think it's actually green. Even though Paul's care for his Pokémon is largely arbitrary, the fact that he's putting that time in, rather than pumping them full of Rare Candies to get them fully evolved as soon as possible, is an aspect of green. He's letting the Pokémon grow on their own time, getting them experience points and effort values bit by bit as he battles Sue trainers. (Which I just remembered is outlawed . . . in the modern setting . . . maybe Paul's screwing around back in the day is the reason for that rule existing now?)

Paul is BUG. Though he has no Bug-types.

—doctorlit realizes it will be hard for anyone else to debate his characters when he has published so little material

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