Where do you make these banners?
I used Gimp.
Where do you make these banners?
Where do you make these banners?
Where do you make these banners?
I used Gimp.
Scene from the first Crisis as all of the Character sheets pivot to the magical/supernatural:
Makes me wish I can do my own custom hero. His faith would be challenged to the very core.
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T_________________________________________________________
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T
_________________________________________________________C H A R A C T E R S U M M A R Y_________________________________________________________
C H A R A C T E R S U M M A R Y
Subject 13-B04
_________________________________________________________
Human/Kryptonian Hybrid Clone | A Frickin' Superhero |
_________________________________________________________
Metropolis | Delaware | United States_________________________________________________________C H A R A C T E R N O T E S
C H A R A C T E R N O T E S-M I S C E L L A N E O U S
▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔
► To be filled when the time comes
-_________________________________________________________P O S T C A T A L O G
P O S T C A T A L O G-P O S T C A T A L O G
▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔
◼
- ________________________________________________________________________________________C H A R A C T E R C O N C E P T
C H A R A C T E R C O N C E P TSuperboy was born in a glass womb with a syringe and petri dish for parents. He was the firstborn son of CADMUS International, a rapidly rising conglomerate that got its start as a biopharmaceutical company at the cutting edge of genetic engineering and genome editing. The ambitions of their founder, Dr. Paul Westfield, stretched far further than medicine, however. He was engrossed with the metahuman phenomena and Superman in-particular, pouring his heart and soul into unlocking the alien's genetic potential. That obsession bore fruit and it would come to be called Superboy. His 'birth' radically altered the company's direction. They hired teams of PR consultants, marketing experts and social media gurus to design the Superboy's persona from the ground up. His appearance, personality and very being were all shaped for one, specific mission: to sell the public- and national governments- on homegrown superheroes.
Four months later, Superboy is a household name. He has one of the largest social media followings of any public superhero. He's appeared on late night TV, national news, and even a certain comedian and DMT enthusiast's podcast. They've got him on soda ads, pajamas and charity campaigns. A drone-based film crew ensures all of his heroics are publicized, from the planned events to the spontaneous battles with low-grade villains. CADMUS even got him into the freakin’ Avengers! Rumor has it there's a documentary series in the works that'll reveal the real, grungy underbelly of what its like to be a superhero-- on CADMUS's exclusive streaming service, of course.
For all the power, fame and wealth at his fingertips, Superboy couldn't be more dissatisfied. He's no idiot- he knows he's a product from a test tube meant to push an agenda. CADMUS has him shaking hands and signing autographs when he oughta be helping people- Superman doesn't do media tours. They might call him family, might show him their twisted version of appreciation, but he doesn't have parents. Can't have real relationships. He yearns for...something more.________________________________________________________________________________________P L O T ( S ) & G O A L ( S )
P L O T ( S ) & G O A L ( S )Superboy was my old ID on the Guild for a reason: I absolutely adore this character. As a real young kid Superman was always my favorite superhero, and he was strangely both something to aspire toward and yet too perfect to ever attain. Then along came Superboy, the living representation of that idea- and I was hooked.
This iteration of the character is my modernized take on the character, shifting him to be the closest real world analogue we have to the superhero: influencers and celebrities. It’s a take on the genre we’ve seen before- The Boys is an obvious inspiration- but not in these One Universe games. I’m hoping to tackle some big capital-T-themes this time around: all the expected SciFi trappings on artificially created lifeforms, corporate power and influencer culture. Give it a spicing of coming-of-age teen drama and you’ve got yourself a decently meaty story.
Don’t let any of that distract you from the hitting things and all the shitty one-liners.
My biggest hope is that somebody comes along and applied for the the big, blue Boy Scout, but I made sure the concept could stand on its own two legs without Superman as a player character- all it really demands is that he exists and is somewhat notable as a figure. I’m eternally down as fuck for an eventual forming of the Teen Titans or some other group of young fuckups as that’s the environment the character thrives in the most, but I’ll be more than happy with the occasional team up. For this beginning stretch of the game Superboy is undoubtedly a ROAMING character, but I’ll be running through a Cadmus plot in his solo stints to develop him as a character and there’s a very good chance that could balloon into a full blown plot, turning him into a DRIVING character for at least one arc.
T H E A D V E N T U R E S O F S U P E R B O Y
▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔I S S U E # 0 1PULL MY STRINGS
<Snipped quote>
<Snipped quote by Cybermaxx>
Minor change: I made Superboy an Avenger babeee
<Snipped quote by Ever Faithful>
There are plenty of canon characters who have faith and belief systems. Daredevil and Nightcrawler are both Catholic.
<Snipped quote by Cybermaxx>
Minor change: I made Superboy an Avenger babeee
<Snipped quote by Cybermaxx>
Scene from the first Crisis as all of the Character sheets pivot to the magical/supernatural:
<Snipped quote by Hound55>
Don't worry, magic is in everyone's heart, you just have to search for it or something.
That or be baller and just have a magical artifact.