Subject: Hi again?
Author:
Posted on: 2012-10-08 17:56:00 UTC
Anebrin's probably concussed or in some sort of shock. Also, he probably shouldn't be walking if he's running into walls after being hit on the head, but since when have the flowers been great on employee safety?
(Also, technical note: are Fighter, Ranger and the like supposed to be titles? I figured they were, due to the setting and the consistency with which you did it, but if they aren't then they need to not have capitals at the beginning.)
After that, Des' trick of "I've analyzed your fandom," actually reads okay, for Des being in shock/concussed. It does make some sense for ppc agents that come from world one to guess fandoms that they're very familiar with, and it's not especially Sherlock-style specific. Anebrin not having a lot of reaction to what is essentially a non-personal deduction is okay, because, let's face it, Sherlock gets cussed out because he blurts out things that are private in front of all of Scotland Yard. What I have slight trouble with is that Anebrin might be surprised that someone knows what type of elf he is, even if there are multiple types in his home world: either they are easy to tell apart (as they probably are in a videogame) or they are very hard to tell apart, and so far his only experience is within his own world. He does not know where he is, that there might be elves from other worlds in HQ, or even what has happened to him. If it is easy, in his setting, to tell elves apart based on dress and hair color, he shouldn't be as shocked by Des' deduction as he is. (Compare: Hey, I see you have red hair and green eyes, are you Irish? Yeah, I know it's stereotypical, but if it works in the setting he'd be used to it.)
If Anebrin is going to get riled up, I'd think that knowing where he came from would be the thing to bother him, unless the elf group is some sort of secret in the game. Plus, the getting riled up just doesn't seem to jive right with how stunned he was a moment before. He needs to transition from stunned to wigging out over things being crazy, or something.
However, the battle scene read a lot better than the last time.