I'm still doing these! I've just been needlessly busy over the last few weeks and haven't got to replying to the past four questions. Sorry 'bout that. I'm making up for that by replying to all of them.
littlebean wrote:What is your character's current situation in their life? What happens day to day, what are some major events and plots they are going through right now. How did they happen, what drove this plot forward and what are the reasons behind everything happening to them? How does your character feel/what do they think about what's happening? What do others think or feel about these happenings?
Xibtrae was trapped within her old weapon, a war scythe, via the Gaiasoul Concealment technique (a technique used to imprison gods that could not otherwise be killed). She remained trapped for tens of thousands of years, until, on Dystopia, a young girl by the name of Val, when fleeing a ravenous horde of shades, stumbled upon ruins of Greoul's Old Kingdom. There, she found an ancient and discarded war scythe. Awakened, Xibtrae offered to save the girl's life, but at a cost: the only thing Xibtrae could do was swap places with the girl, imprisoning the girl and freeing Xibtrae to dispose of the shades.
Turns out that tens of thousands of years of spiritual imprisonment kind of weakened her ability to make use of all her militia training, and Xibtrae kind of sort of had to run the hell away. Right now, she's traveling with a man named Garv, searching for a way to make good on her promise and swap back out with Val again. Unfortunately, Gaiasoul Concealment gets hairy when it comes to trapping non-gods (i.e. Val), requiring entirely different methods and techniques-- none of which Val or Xibtrae have any knowledge of.
Of course, no one but Val and Xibtrae know the truth about the matter. Xibtrae's been trying to keep that on the down-low and all.
littlebean wrote:What happened to bring them to that point? Describe the events and what caused them. How does your character feel about those events and how did those events effect them? What was their childhood like?
As has been said before, Xibtrae comes from a distant world. She and her people were descendants of gods, born tens of thousands of years before Death's population of Utopia. Each were born with distinct characteristics, with nearly ten times the defining genetics as human beings. Xibtrae was perhaps the closest in appearance to what we might call "normal."
She lived in a small town with her grandfather for the longest time, attending school up until her eighth year of life (the equivalent of fourteen on Utopia. Xibtrae's planet was a bit further from their sun than Utopia/Dystopia is). It was around that time that a cataclysm hit her town in the form of a great meteor, utterly annihilating it and everyone within-- whilst Xibtrae was out. She was just barely out of the way, on a distant hill overlooking town, and was nearly killed by the shockwave. The next thing she knew, she was drafted into her country's militia.
Turned out the meteor was a living creature. Over time, it had simply burrowed its way into their world. Xibtrae engaged herself to the militia for years, investigating the disturbance.
The whole experience was fairly traumatic for her, and left her in a pretty dark place for years. She rarely spoke a word to anyone until she was at the Utopian equivalent of sixteen, when a young man actually succeeded in making her laugh at something. From that point on, she progressively gained a social group or two, ultimately making her life a wee bit happier.
Because I might actually make a plot out of this someday, I'll leave it at this: she wound up getting into a fight with an otherwise powerful foe, who, unable to defeat Xibtrae, weakened her enough to use the Gaiasoul Concealment technique to trap her within her own war scythe, effectively imprisoning her for tens of thousands of years. She was the familiar weapon of Death for some time, but was eventually lost in a battle he was hard pressed to win. Passed from collector to collector, she was inevitably lost in spiritual hibernation within Greoul's Old Kingdom, long before its collapse--and was lost within its ruins for easily hundreds to thousands of years beyond that.
littlebean wrote:What are your character's aspirations for the future? What do they want to happen? What do they THINK will happen, what're the differences between the two?
Right now, Xibtrae's aspirations are fairly simple: switch out with Val. Not only is that what she wants to happen (though admittedly, Xibtrae kind of enjoys being free of her prison, so she kind of wants to stay outside for a little while longer), but it's generally what she thinks is going to happen, too.
littlebean wrote:What are their doubts, what don't they think will happen?
Xibtrae's pretty sure she won't find a means of freeing Val without trapping herself in the process. She doubts the possibility so much that she isn't even bothering to look into the idea.
littlebean wrote:Forget about what THEY think, what do you as the writer know will lay in store for them?
After a couple of conversations with Zach whilst he was visiting Manda and I, it's been deduced that Xibtrae is probably going to engage in a romantic relationship with Garv Phibrizzo.
littlebean wrote:Describe your character's routine, from the moment they wake up to the moment they go to bed. Try to include time. Can you describe their routine Sunday-Saturday through the whole week, do you know what their routine is every day? Do they and others like the routine, how do they feel about it? Is it a proper functional routine or a disastrous one?
At this point, Xibtrae has a very basic routine. She wakes up, eats breakfast, hikes, makes camp with Garv, eats dinner, and sleeps. Sometimes they come across interesting things, but that's about it, for the most part.
Way back when, though, she had a fairly strict regiment. She'd wake up at sunrise, eat, exercise, spar, and exercise some more until about dinner (sundown), after which, she'd have the evening free to do as she pleased. Most of that time was spent with friends. That's how it was for most warriors in her country; everyone was accustomed to it, even her. The point was to be at top condition at all times.
Incidentally, being trapped for thousands of years had a time-stopping effect for her. When she was released, she was in the same physical condition as she was before being trapped, but lacked the mental faculties to make use of her limbs, let alone any technique she'd ever learned.