Subject: I've always seen "canon" minis as different in personality.
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Posted on: 2013-04-28 06:10:00 UTC

I've seen plenty of typos in books, though most of them are the non-mini-creating sort.

I've always seen a mini's intelligence being based on how many times its name would likely be used. For minis of rare or ridiculous misspellings like Caprtsin Jqck Sprow or Asrogron, they would be practically feral. For more easily understood misspellings like James Kurk, they would be intelligent and possibly fully sapient, but still not really reconcilable as intelligent beings to most people. For minis in published works, since their name has spread through the world regardless of the potency of the misspelling that created them, they would gain a large amount of intelligence, as well as a desire to lord their status over the other minis. An "alpha complex", if you will. Whether the other minis actually would submit to the publishing error depends on the species, of course.

I briefly toyed with the idea of having my agents meet the mini-Rayquaza "Pokemon", who is not only printed in a multitude of websites and official works, but has absorbed enough knowledge, largely through cultural osmosis, to be a genius by human standards, even gaining the power of full speech in three languages. All played for laughs, of course, especially since he'd be more eloquent than one of my agents would. I might still do it, since the Pokémon mission I planned is far enough in the future for me to regain the element of surprise.

Hmm, the "Kublai Khan" misspelling makes me wonder what a Coleridge mini would be. Mini-Honeydews, maybe. He did mention that a lot, and I don't think we have any minis that take the form of fruit.

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