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Status Updates posted by Rebel the Wolfgirl
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I know you aren't too big on superheroes, but what do you think of mine (at least, what I've put out) so far?
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Yeah, it's not "dark" in the same way the 80s and 90s
(and DC up until the Rebirth event)are. My setting is dark in the same way the Golden Age of Comic Books (1938-1950) was - moral ambiguity (I once stated none of the heroes are Lawful Good like the generic superhero archetype- they're more in the middle of the Law/Chaos-Good/Evil axis), more traditionally supernatural/cosmic horror threats, more subversive themes...
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OK, so Aquaria (the Renegadeverse's Lovecraftian equivalent to Aquaman) is said to have met Infinite while marching into Berlin to kill Adolf Hitler in the Second World War.
Infinite forms the Victory Legion of Earth 70 years after the war. Which presents one of two possibilities:
If the war ended as it did in our timeline (in 1945), then that would place the Renegadeverse's stories in 2015.
If we mean "70 years" as in the current year, then WWII ended in 1949, 4 years later.
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AYYYY CHILLA CHILLA
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Hmmm...I'm considering the name "Legion of Victory" for my Justice League equivalent.
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I just realized that almost none of the superheroes (well, none of the main ones) of the Renegadeverse fit the stereotypical, Lawful Good idea of the typical hero. Here's where they fall under the Law-Chaos and Good-Evil axis (axises? Axses???):
Infinite: Chaotic Good
Ishtar: Hard to say...but considering said goddess was very much evil in Mesopotamian mythology...I'll just say True Neutral since her civilian identity harnesses that power for good (it's basically a Banner/Hulk dynamic combined with Wonder Woman).
Lettuce: Chaotic Neutral
Infinigirl: Probably the sole Lawful Good hero among them.
Eisheth: Neutral Evil, type I. She's just a contractor of Hell trying to do her job - tempting and collecting souls of the damned (and enjoying the benefits
)
Aquaria: Definitely True Neutral too - she is a Deep One, after all; she operates by her own alien morality.
Marvelous: Neutral Good. He is successor to the hero known as "the Champion", after all, and he'll work with anybody as long as it's for justice and goodwill.
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Hmmm...anyone who's interested wanna suggest names for the Renegadeverse's Justice League equivalent?
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Ayyyyy...
...ngel Dust.
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Is it weird I sometimes think about me and @Treeglow Flicker making music together?

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@Treeglow Flicker One you seem excited by, no less.
Considering our similar music tastes (classic rock and roll and pop), is it any wonder.
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I'm thinking of adding a couple of (relatively) minor heroes to the Renegadeverse, based on @Lucky Bolt and @TheRockARooster: V8 (a superhero operating out of Florida with superhuman speed and flight as her primary powerset) and Mockingbird (a deliberate parody of the 90s Anti-Hero trope who is actually a nice guy when "out of character", as he takes up being a hero for hire).
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Someone finally remembered this exists.
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I didn't know you watched Victorious!
And yeah, that's my favorite song. It's so cute, especially since he says "I love you" like twice in the song.
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@Emerald Heart Yeah, used to love that show.
Yeah, it really is. Robbie is my spirit animal.
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He is the sweetest boy on the entire show.
Hope he and Cat finally ended up together after the show got cancelled.
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Now that I've got the blog for the Renegadeverse set up, what should I do first: an introduction to the universe as a whole, or getting straight to the point and introducing our heroes?
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Fun fact: the Superman analogue in my "Renegadeverse" of superhero fiction, (the) Infinite, is polyamorous.
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"Daddy? "
"Yes, son? "
"W-w-what does regret mean?"
" Well, son, the funny thing about regret is is that it's better to regret something you have done than something you haven't done. And by the way, if you see your mom this weekend, would you be sure and tell her...
S A T A N ! ? "
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I'm thinking of doing a take on the King Arthur mythos as an experiment in writing some fantasy of my own - like a number of writers, I plan to take the route of setting this story in the period when Arthur was supposed to have lived: in sub-Roman Britain, around the 5th and 6th centuries. And in my take, Arthur's kingdom isn't established until he's in his mid-40s, and it falls when he's 80.
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aI've already got the story all plotted out, actually.
Book 1: Caledfwich, or - The Birth and Rise of Arthur (covering 582 AD to 597 AD): Focuses on the early period of Arthur's life as he grows up in a Britain still reeling from the aftereffects of Romanization, the illegitimate son of the warlord Utyer and mentored under the mysterious bard and wizard Myrdwnn. At the age of 15, Arthur is granted his lineage; not by pulling a sword from a stone, but by being gifted the ancestral sword Caledfwich.
Book 2: The Quest for Camelot (covering 597 to 627 AD) : Seeing as his young age is causing a stir amongst his father's people, Arthur ventures out into the world as a warlord and mercenary. Along the way, he gains 12 companions and a lover, Gwnhywfar, whom he makes his queen. During this period, he establishes his kingdom, consisting of Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, Britanny, and Armorica (parts of France), undergoes the Grail Quest, and fights the Anglo-Saxons.
Book 3: Here Lies King Arthur, the Once and Future King (covering 627 to 662 AD): With his kingdom of Briton and court at the fortress Caerleon established, a now older Arthur must deal with the politics of an ever-changing England, including a love affair between his queen and most trusted knight, the rivalries between his sons for their father's throne, and the slowly looming threat of Medraut, his half-sister Moraguse's son.
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Hmmm...you guys think I should do a blog concerning my superhero fiction?
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So I found out today that Captain Marvel (at least the original Fawcett Comics one) is in the public domain - at least technically.
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