Subject: Um. Well.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-05-08 13:25:00 UTC

Let's take my newest agent characters for examples.

Kozar was a slightly unusual Klingon, and was a bit ostracized and looked down upon in his home world. In the PPC, I've put him through working with someone who presents herself as insane, half a month of dealing with the same partner's new tribble (the Klingons view them as horrible parasites), a new partner who he ends up caring enough about to adopt into his family--who dies, and a new partner who could, at any moment, be killed and turn into a completely different person. I wouldn't say I've been particularly kind to him.

The Reader (Kozar's latest partner) recently found out that her planet and her people had been destroyed in a horrific war that she actually saw part of, and that there are two people of her species remaining outside the PPC (and a somewhat larger number inside it). She's not dealing so well with that. Her partner is also still trying to deal with losing his previous partner, who, as I mentioned, was family, and he keeps seeing bits of his former partner in her (it doesn't help that her current regeneration is of a similar height and coloring to the dead partner). She wants them to get along and be able to work together, but they mostly end up arguing or focusing on work. She also repeatedly makes missteps in Klingon culture, which she doesn't know very well. And, on top of all that, her TARDIS is missing.

So you tell me. Have I been particularly kind to these characters? I mean, on the one hand, yes, but on the other hand...no, I really haven't.

And while I wouldn't say that this is typical of my work, it's not particularly atypical, either.

In terms of the comic...it's a cute idea, but only if you don't look too closely at the message it's sending.

~DF

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