@Draken Hi! Sorry for taking so long to reply. Came home and was knackered so I collapsed in bed and only just woke up. All in all, Ilya fits really well, barring a few changes.
The first thing is that it sounds like his decision to become an Inquisitor was his own, and well, this wouldn't really be possible, since children are brought to the Red Seminary when they are 7-9 years old and are only accepted if they show potential for having larger than usual ether pools. I'm thinking his family really desired their boy to have a high position in the military, so maybe they spent the first seven or nine years of his life molding him into their perfect soldier, so that when he enrolled into the the Varyan military academy (still need to give this place a proper name, any ideas?) he would properly excel. Maybe they're akin to those weird sports parents who put their kids through hell in hopes that they'll someday become a star athlete? Maybe his dad just wanted Ilya to follow in his footsteps?
So, he was being trained to be a soldier, which explains his prodigious talent with a rifle and other strategic-based skills, but then, at some point in his childhood, his etheric magic manifested, and his parents were overjoyed. "Our child won't be a high-ranking officer, but a powerful Inquisitor! Praised be to Lord Varya!", and that's when they promptly brought him to the Red Seminary and he was accepted due to his magical ability. That's my idea for how to fix this inconsistency. What do you think?
If we go this route, you'd have to change it so that his marksmanship ability didn't manifest in his second year, but instead that he's been an excellent marksman since childhood, due to his parents forcing him to learn this skill.
By the way, I think you missed the bit of info where I stated that training to become an Inquisitor is a twelve-year long ordeal, so him "saying goodbye to his family for the next five years" wouldn't make sense (pupils aren't allowed contact with their family in that time either).
Now, him being the first to volunteer to go on the expedition would't work, since the group was still in their final stages of training when the first steam arks left for El, so Ilya would've "missed the boat", so to speak.
Besides the above, I'm fine with the rest of his CS. His ether abilities are cool! though I will warn you that there is nothing like an "ocean" in this world, as all the sea has been frozen solid for eons. The steam arks do "burn" through the ice with their massive ether torches, but this just turns the ice into slush. So yeah, when we're out in the icefields, Ilya will have to depend on the water he keeps with him, which he'll be able to replenish when back onboard the steam arks.
By the way, you can upload images from your PC through imgur, and then use img tags to link the image here. :)
@shylarah "I meant the vials in my last post, not a person's actual ether."
The ether in the vials can't be drawn either. People can't just draw ether from things using magic or telekinesis (besides your character, since that's one of her abilities). The vials are inserted into the catalysts, which are what allow Inquisitors to use their super powerful spells, and those in turn can be drawn from. I'm thinking the catalysts are tuned specifically to each Inquisitor, and *insert magical mumbo jumbo here* is what allows a warpriest to use this device to use their super powerful weapons. I think catalysts should be a thing, otherwise we'd have to inject the Omestrian ether into ourselves, which would be weird and cumbersome to have to do that in the middle of battle. Sigh, I think I'm going to draw some kind of diagram to show how this works. :p
Speaking of drawing, I found myself with some time last night and drew Ragnar. I'm not the best artist, but whatevs. Let me know what you think! And if all of you are cool with it, I'd love to draw each of your characters too when I get a chance. :)