Let's get this rolling.
-Y'know, if the OFUR ever returns to life, I half want to enroll as a mole. Nobody seems to like the digger folk, and Axtel Sturnclaw and Egburt are two of my favorite characters.
-How would Yorick be disguised in OFU's? He's an urple bloody skeletal champion sorcerer (yes, I finally decided on a class), but what would he turn into in, say, OFUR?
-On the subject of Yorick, what would the typical response of most agents be to seeing him? Besides, ya know, screaming. He's friendly enough, just blast-happy and lacking in self-preservation. Not that he needs that latter one. Bloody skeleton.
-So, I have a full set of ten near-godlike beings as original characters, though they stand outside the main conflict in their story of origin. All pf them violate some law of physics, whether a real-world one or an in-setting one. In addition, all but two of them are resurrected members of a certain in-setting race. How would one go about writing their interactions with the PPC? They are:
-- White, the Law of Life. The most powerful of the group, able to create souls (a true impossibility in the story)
-- Red, the Guardian of Power. He's a dragon, although his exact appearance constantly changes. His violation of physics is the ability to destroy matter. He's violently protective of Blue, but we'll get to that one later. He used to be one of the dragon people.
-- Orange is not fully defined, but my friend and I figure he does weird crap with gravity. He used to be a Librarian, a demonic-but-neutral keeper of universal knowledge.
-- Yellow, the Mentalist. A yellow humanoid with no arms, and no features on its head other than seven eyes. Its violation of science is an in-setting one, namely that it can completely bypass any opposing willpower for mind-reading. He used to be Kyouki-jin, an alien race of shapeshifters and bloody psychos, two of whom are central protagonists and one of which is the big bad.
-- Green, the Crafter of Plagues. A 300-foot centipede who is actually a very friendly and social person. It's just that he generates a disease that afflicts all life and kills in minutes, and thanks to Gray, he hasn't had a chance to learn to control it. He hates Gray. He used to be Karthenl, an alien race of arsenic-based insectoids.
-- Gray, the Renegade. He fancies himself a cop that goes about punishing criminals in the universe with his timehax and mind-rape cigars. The problem is that he typically considers anyone a criminal, and was soundly dealt with by White. The only evil one of the bunch, he can manipulate time (another in-setting impossibility) and he used to be human. Specifically, Al Capone.
-- Blue, the Generator. Like Orange, he isn't fully defined, but he's at least more defined than Orange. He's a childish entity, protected by Red and who can create energy of all kinds. He's very friendly, and likely more suited to the Nursery, but there you have it.
-- Indigo, the Living Mountain. Exactly what it says on the tin, except the tin doesn't say that it's COMPLETELY solid, and I mean completely. Yes, down to the subatomic level. Yes, it's a physical impossibility, but we've established by this point that the Strange don't care about such things. It's the last of the Ganda, a semi-sapient form of silicon-based life.
-- Violet, the Rampant. The largest and most monstrous of the strange, whose physical problem is being a living thing that moves faster than light without bending space. He/she/it/they used to be a member of an unnamed and mostly-extinct race of psychotic alien giants. It's bigger than most stars, so, uh, yeah, no PPC for this one.
-- Black, the Law of Death. Basically, the Grim Reaper, and it possesses the ability to destroy souls. It can speak, but you can only hear it if you're either Strange or if it really hates you and wants you afraid of it. Don't worry, he's mostly doing his job. He hates those that get off on making others suffer, though.