[ use this for all IC communication. It can be used as a wall or texting or whatever method. ]
[ use this for all IC communication. It can be used as a wall or texting or whatever method. ]
Your character has met Noh-Varr
Kate Bishop, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways, Young Avengers #1
First, they fought once while he was under mind control, then he betrayed the Avengers. They slept together. She promised to have hot makeouts with him after everything got settled. He really likes her.
Carol Danvers, Ms. Marvel (v2) #35, the Avengers, Secret Avengers 26-28, Avengers 27, 28
Noh-Varr became Captain Marvel, which upset Carol a lot. Furthermore, they had a fight. She punched him, he held her up by the neck, it was bad. She called him a crony of Norman Osborn's, which is not terribly inaccurate. He learned that Osborn was using him, so he quit and served on the Avengers as the Protector. This went okay until he was given a mission to betray the Avengers by stealing the Phoenix Force and bringing it back to his Kree homeland. He learned in the process that the Kree intended to destroy earth, which he had to stop. Noh-Varr asked for a chance to prove that he would do better, but he was told to stay away from earth forever by Hank McCoy.
Billy Kaplan, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways, Young Avengers #4
They fought once while he was under mind control. He then showed up with Kate to save the day later on.
Karolina Dean, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Loki Laufeyson, Young Avengers #4
Noh-Varr won't realize the Lokis are different right away (he can't pick up that kind of nuance just yet).
Nico Minoru, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Victor Mancha, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Natasha Romanova
They are on-screen together in numerous Avengers group scenes, so she would know he served as the Protector. If she is after Avengers versus X-Men, she'd undoubtedly know of his betrayal.
Tommy Shepard, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control. Tumblr also wants them to kiss. Like really wants them to kiss. Even Marvel has noticed and made jokes about it in their AR apps.
Your character likely knows who Noh-Varr is
For Remy, Josh, Jubilee, X-23, etc., Noh-Varr is undoubtedly familiar from his brief tenure as one of Osborn's Avengers. He was Captain Marvel. I don't believe it was a secret that he went on to become the Protector. They likely would not know about his betrayal. Dark Reign, and thus the Dark Avengers, happened after Secret Invasion! If you need a timeline.
Go ahead and ask if you app a Marvel character! I will let you know.
Kate Bishop, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways, Young Avengers #1
First, they fought once while he was under mind control, then he betrayed the Avengers. They slept together. She promised to have hot makeouts with him after everything got settled. He really likes her.
Carol Danvers, Ms. Marvel (v2) #35, the Avengers, Secret Avengers 26-28, Avengers 27, 28
Noh-Varr became Captain Marvel, which upset Carol a lot. Furthermore, they had a fight. She punched him, he held her up by the neck, it was bad. She called him a crony of Norman Osborn's, which is not terribly inaccurate. He learned that Osborn was using him, so he quit and served on the Avengers as the Protector. This went okay until he was given a mission to betray the Avengers by stealing the Phoenix Force and bringing it back to his Kree homeland. He learned in the process that the Kree intended to destroy earth, which he had to stop. Noh-Varr asked for a chance to prove that he would do better, but he was told to stay away from earth forever by Hank McCoy.
Billy Kaplan, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways, Young Avengers #4
They fought once while he was under mind control. He then showed up with Kate to save the day later on.
Karolina Dean, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Loki Laufeyson, Young Avengers #4
Noh-Varr won't realize the Lokis are different right away (he can't pick up that kind of nuance just yet).
Nico Minoru, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Victor Mancha, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control.
Natasha Romanova
They are on-screen together in numerous Avengers group scenes, so she would know he served as the Protector. If she is after Avengers versus X-Men, she'd undoubtedly know of his betrayal.
Tommy Shepard, Civil War: Young Avengers and Runaways
They fought once while he was under mind control. Tumblr also wants them to kiss. Like really wants them to kiss. Even Marvel has noticed and made jokes about it in their AR apps.
Your character likely knows who Noh-Varr is
For Remy, Josh, Jubilee, X-23, etc., Noh-Varr is undoubtedly familiar from his brief tenure as one of Osborn's Avengers. He was Captain Marvel. I don't believe it was a secret that he went on to become the Protector. They likely would not know about his betrayal. Dark Reign, and thus the Dark Avengers, happened after Secret Invasion! If you need a timeline.
Go ahead and ask if you app a Marvel character! I will let you know.
(no subject)
28/4/13 20:33-YOU-
Name: Alison
Email: prongster @ gmail.com
AIM: my partner haro [AIM]
DW username:
justice
Munhead or previous character journals (optional): blah blah blah you know this
Timezone: EST
-THEM-
Character name: Noh-Varr
Series: Marvel 616
Character history: Marvel wiki link.
Character personality:
Above all else, Noh-Varr seeks a purpose in life. Given his age (early twenties, presumably) and occupation (superhero), it isn't that surprising that he might want this to keep going, but for some, it is a little easier to find one. For him, it's almost impossible. That's in part because he has poor judgment; his desperation for his purpose and to fall in line with it at any cost gets him in trouble a lot. He desperately wants to do good, but in the end, he ends up doing a lot of things that aren't very good. He is, however, very dedicated to good. When things go awry and he realizes a mistake, it doesn't take him long to want to right it. It's just that it's not always easy for Noh-Varr to figure out what, exactly, is the means to doing that.
In fact, that might be his greatest problem. As someone who is young and who should probably be following someone's orders, he is a little aimless in figuring out things for himself. When he does, his decisions are rash. Sure, he can flip around and try to turn the tides when things weren't going the way they were supposed to, but when no opportunities present themselves, he finds himself searching, desperate, wandering, and in a bit of trouble. While at the moment, Noh-Varr seems determined not to follow anyone's orders, there is a part of him that seeks to impress. When with the Avengers (both dark and original flavors), he did everything he could to fall in line. When ordered by the Kree to protect the earth, he didn't think twice about it. The moment those very same Kree told him to take a piece of the Phoenix Force for them and betray the Avengers to claim it, he thought it was a necessary evil. Necessary evils suck, but there are greater purposes ... or so he thought. And even now, as he joins up with Kate Bishop and the others, there is a part of him that can't help but go above and beyond in the situation to both look good and help as much as possible. He seeks approval, never really wanting to disappoint.
In a large way, Noh-Varr has been wanting to acclimate. This is interesting given his skill set, but he wants to belong somewhere. When his family died, he reacted badly, lashing out and taking revenge, essentially seeming like a hellbent and angry teenager. When he learned he had another part to play, he decided to—this eventually led to him taking Captain Marvel as a moniker, and if he could be a hero like him, wouldn't that be grand? (Except he fails. Noh-Varr fails a lot.) As a member of the Avengers, he did everything he could to both adjust to earth—an interesting point, as the others on the team frequently treated him as an outsider—and he loved his girlfriend at the same time, who introduced him to a lot of "earthling" concepts. He was inquisitive, hardworking, and did everything he could to assist with both tech and analysis. If there was a problem, he did not hesitate to face it or answer the call of duty. Though he was barely accepted into the fold as an Avenger—sure, he was on the team, but again, no one really bothered to know him—he didn't let it get in his way. He had a purpose. His purpose was what mattered.
Only now Noh-Varr is without that purpose. A mistake led to him betraying the Avengers and he pretty obviously wants very little to do with the Kree. The Kree ordered him away from earth, as did the Avengers. But, hey, you seek a purpose that long, are you really going to turn your back on it?
The inquisitive individual who seeks to understand earth remains, with a few dry one-liners, but there's a newfound enthusiasm to him these days—which, really, makes a lot of sense. He came to know earth, and despite everything, he's determined to continue protecting it, even if others are telling him not to. This is the first time he's been defiant and chose something on his own and it says a lot about the way he's carrying himself. There is a part of him that's the same as he's always been: intense, a touch too serious, analytical to a fault, but he has eased up a little. Noh-Varr has come a long way, and he's learned how to joke (at least lightly) and can carry himself fairly well. He's still eager to please, and frankly, his personality hasn't changed much, but there's a definite shift from the aimless Noh-Varr desperate for a purpose and the Noh-Varr now who fights to hold on to it.
After all, being a superhero is awesome. Everyone should try it.
-SAMPLES-
Journal entry sample:
Fake? That's new. And surprising. You'll have to try harder.
But then, I thought there was a higher power here. Not like those from earth ... not a god. But a supreme intelligence. No matter what is told to me, no matter what I hear, I know that isn't true.
This is earth, though, and I'm here without the permission of anyone else—including myself. Interesting, isn't it?
Well, tell me about it. What's so great about New Moore? It's a genuine question.
Log/prose based sample:
It doesn't take him long to slide out of the window. After the previous structural damage and the constant reminders to try and avoid it, he knows it's better to pry open the window and climb out, hands taking hold of the side of the building as he climbs along it. If this is where they've brought him, there has to be something to it—but it's almost embarrassing how poor the security is. No one stops him, and nothing from Tony Stark's tech or anything else comes to shoo him away from earth. In fact, they brought him here, and unlike his previous cages, they've done a different job of it. This isn't an illusion. This isn't meant to remind him that he can do good like the Skrull who was Mar-Vell. This is ...
He peers upward, and although it's night, he can tell from the constellations: this is earth. But an enclosed earth, separate from the rest of humanity.
The real question is which earth is it? He knows that's an important one, but he continues clambering upward. This may not be an illusion, but there is something to it.
But what?
Strange, too, that he comes here so soon after promising that he would travel elsewhere with the Avengers. (The Young Avengers? A group of heroes? Their own jokes about themselves are ones he's just beginning to grasp.)
After finding nothing, he kicks off the roof of the hospital, swings off an electrical line carefully, and lands on the roof of a coffee shop. He'll figure it out soon enough.
Name: Alison
Email: prongster @ gmail.com
AIM: my partner haro [AIM]
DW username:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Munhead or previous character journals (optional): blah blah blah you know this
Timezone: EST
-THEM-
Character name: Noh-Varr
Series: Marvel 616
Character history: Marvel wiki link.
Character personality:
Above all else, Noh-Varr seeks a purpose in life. Given his age (early twenties, presumably) and occupation (superhero), it isn't that surprising that he might want this to keep going, but for some, it is a little easier to find one. For him, it's almost impossible. That's in part because he has poor judgment; his desperation for his purpose and to fall in line with it at any cost gets him in trouble a lot. He desperately wants to do good, but in the end, he ends up doing a lot of things that aren't very good. He is, however, very dedicated to good. When things go awry and he realizes a mistake, it doesn't take him long to want to right it. It's just that it's not always easy for Noh-Varr to figure out what, exactly, is the means to doing that.
In fact, that might be his greatest problem. As someone who is young and who should probably be following someone's orders, he is a little aimless in figuring out things for himself. When he does, his decisions are rash. Sure, he can flip around and try to turn the tides when things weren't going the way they were supposed to, but when no opportunities present themselves, he finds himself searching, desperate, wandering, and in a bit of trouble. While at the moment, Noh-Varr seems determined not to follow anyone's orders, there is a part of him that seeks to impress. When with the Avengers (both dark and original flavors), he did everything he could to fall in line. When ordered by the Kree to protect the earth, he didn't think twice about it. The moment those very same Kree told him to take a piece of the Phoenix Force for them and betray the Avengers to claim it, he thought it was a necessary evil. Necessary evils suck, but there are greater purposes ... or so he thought. And even now, as he joins up with Kate Bishop and the others, there is a part of him that can't help but go above and beyond in the situation to both look good and help as much as possible. He seeks approval, never really wanting to disappoint.
In a large way, Noh-Varr has been wanting to acclimate. This is interesting given his skill set, but he wants to belong somewhere. When his family died, he reacted badly, lashing out and taking revenge, essentially seeming like a hellbent and angry teenager. When he learned he had another part to play, he decided to—this eventually led to him taking Captain Marvel as a moniker, and if he could be a hero like him, wouldn't that be grand? (Except he fails. Noh-Varr fails a lot.) As a member of the Avengers, he did everything he could to both adjust to earth—an interesting point, as the others on the team frequently treated him as an outsider—and he loved his girlfriend at the same time, who introduced him to a lot of "earthling" concepts. He was inquisitive, hardworking, and did everything he could to assist with both tech and analysis. If there was a problem, he did not hesitate to face it or answer the call of duty. Though he was barely accepted into the fold as an Avenger—sure, he was on the team, but again, no one really bothered to know him—he didn't let it get in his way. He had a purpose. His purpose was what mattered.
Only now Noh-Varr is without that purpose. A mistake led to him betraying the Avengers and he pretty obviously wants very little to do with the Kree. The Kree ordered him away from earth, as did the Avengers. But, hey, you seek a purpose that long, are you really going to turn your back on it?
The inquisitive individual who seeks to understand earth remains, with a few dry one-liners, but there's a newfound enthusiasm to him these days—which, really, makes a lot of sense. He came to know earth, and despite everything, he's determined to continue protecting it, even if others are telling him not to. This is the first time he's been defiant and chose something on his own and it says a lot about the way he's carrying himself. There is a part of him that's the same as he's always been: intense, a touch too serious, analytical to a fault, but he has eased up a little. Noh-Varr has come a long way, and he's learned how to joke (at least lightly) and can carry himself fairly well. He's still eager to please, and frankly, his personality hasn't changed much, but there's a definite shift from the aimless Noh-Varr desperate for a purpose and the Noh-Varr now who fights to hold on to it.
After all, being a superhero is awesome. Everyone should try it.
-SAMPLES-
Journal entry sample:
Fake? That's new. And surprising. You'll have to try harder.
But then, I thought there was a higher power here. Not like those from earth ... not a god. But a supreme intelligence. No matter what is told to me, no matter what I hear, I know that isn't true.
This is earth, though, and I'm here without the permission of anyone else—including myself. Interesting, isn't it?
Well, tell me about it. What's so great about New Moore? It's a genuine question.
Log/prose based sample:
It doesn't take him long to slide out of the window. After the previous structural damage and the constant reminders to try and avoid it, he knows it's better to pry open the window and climb out, hands taking hold of the side of the building as he climbs along it. If this is where they've brought him, there has to be something to it—but it's almost embarrassing how poor the security is. No one stops him, and nothing from Tony Stark's tech or anything else comes to shoo him away from earth. In fact, they brought him here, and unlike his previous cages, they've done a different job of it. This isn't an illusion. This isn't meant to remind him that he can do good like the Skrull who was Mar-Vell. This is ...
He peers upward, and although it's night, he can tell from the constellations: this is earth. But an enclosed earth, separate from the rest of humanity.
The real question is which earth is it? He knows that's an important one, but he continues clambering upward. This may not be an illusion, but there is something to it.
But what?
Strange, too, that he comes here so soon after promising that he would travel elsewhere with the Avengers. (The Young Avengers? A group of heroes? Their own jokes about themselves are ones he's just beginning to grasp.)
After finding nothing, he kicks off the roof of the hospital, swings off an electrical line carefully, and lands on the roof of a coffee shop. He'll figure it out soon enough.