Costa-Silvas:
This works on a lot of different levels. Great kids media is real in some way, it presents them with the stuff their parents try to hide from them, to keep them from. And there has to be an element of real threat, real fear - not for them, Bondi stressed, but for someone. She explained this during rehearsal while practicing walking over hot coals, which wasn’t intentional for making her point but was pretty effective at it.
The adult stuff, the sauciness, as long as it’s only applied to the Caliban character definitely makes her more adult, makes her threat feel more real in a way that Isabella can’t understand. She won’t understand why Sir Barrera half rose out of his seat for the act too and almost shut it down, before Luis settled him down again - because Luis is an English teacher, and Luis has read the original Grimm tales, and Luis knows that Sir Barrera’s reaction to this display is exactly why it is so important to the performance.
And it helps. Because now even the teenagers are curious about why their bodyguard seems so threatened by the horny robot. They don’t understand because it’s the part of the show that they’re really liking, so they’re not going to interrogate if there’s a problem with it.
Critical successes:
The four year old Herman is hiding behind Isabella, and Isabella is encouraging him to point out Caliban when he sees her, so Ariel can save the show - something Bondi planned to say, but is delighted to pretend was Isabella’s idea.
Gwen, the fourteen year old mathematician? This is absolutely the criteria of a person who has a yawning void in them that they aren't aware of, and tries to fill it completely with the first thing that makes them aware of it. She has learned that she really, really, really likes robots. This will take a bit of time to mature, but right now she’s trying to understand feelings she didn’t know she was capable of having, and she’s going to straight up ice a bitch that gets between her and the source of the feelings she’s trying to interrogate.
Successes:
Pablo, the failson magician? He’s studying the act intensely, like, fiercely. He’s in full “oh shit I accidentally wandered in a masterclass” mode. The fact that the tricks themselves are simple and ones he understands well? Means that he’s watching someone do the performance better. It is one thing to be humbled by someone doing it better than you - another to be humbled by someone doing exactly what you do, but better.
Failures:
Selena the success daughter can admire presentation, but she’s suffered through enough of Pablo doing these tricks and the new packaging just doesn’t do it for her. Her patience is cracked, now, because it came pre-stressed. She’s not pissed off at you, she’s pissed off at her brother and Bondi is just reminding her too much of him.
Jordan, the punk skater with no impulse control? Yeah, unlike Gwen he knows what his feelings are and what he likes about them. The show’s good, and he loves spectacle, but also he’s just kind of shitty-horny, and if he keeps being too low-impulse-control about it - Barrera’s a caged tiger at the moment, and this is something that could break the lock on it.
Wild Cards:
Luca, the other twin, is still playing his console. And Oscar, the sweater vest book kid, is sitting at the front, just drinking it all in. It doesn’t read so much as quiet as on the spectrum - He’s just thinking so hard about what he’s seeing that he’s forgetting to show it on his face most of the time. For now he’s as much of a closed book as the one pressed tight against his lap, but at least unlike Luca he’s not being distracted by it.
Juan, the Eton blazer kid, is next to Sir Barrera, so he’s close enough to hear him angrily whispering into his bluetooth headset about the surprise guest. He’s not mollified at the justification given, about how it’d ruin the magic, but Barrera’s the world’s biggest hypocrite inside his head because he’s not going to stop the show over it now for the same reason. Not when Isabella is getting to feel like Herman’s knight in shining armor right now.
Juan just tells him he’s got to use the bathroom and slips away.
Green;
Luis office was clean. That’s not a failure to find something, though, that’s succeeding at finding nothing. The significance of that could mean a few things that could be useful - is it because he resents his wife’s corruption, is it because his wife doesn’t trust him to be a part of it, or is it something else?
A shiny-headed guard sits with his back to you on the narrow stair back down from the attic. This isn’t his post, but he’s using the step to eat a sandwich from a lunchbox and pull out a tin of dip tobacco - the stuff actually got a lot more popular with modern bespoke cultivars which got rid of most of the aftertaste and side effects. It’s a sign he’s making himself comfortable.
It’s only him, except the attic stair down to the second floor is barely more than shoulder width. How do you solve this, and what’s your move after that?
[You’re totally blind right now is the thing, in a place you know almost nothing about, and a lot of the prompts I’d give use information locked behind risk. Just choosing a direction to head in (like ‘down’) or a method of finding a direction (Find where it’s quietest) (Find where there are the most guards) would work best here.]
Crystal & Fiona:
Fiona asks; “Why did this suddenly become worth robbing a bank over?”
Crystal answers; “The day before I was planning this debacle, the Supreme Court will announce its decision that all transhumans are subhuman. And we aren’t allowed to tell anyone.”
Fiona absorbs this a moment, though she’s faster about it. “I can rob a bank for you,” she says, holding her wrists up and drawing one of the tethers out of them. “If you want. I’ve done it before.”
This works on a lot of different levels. Great kids media is real in some way, it presents them with the stuff their parents try to hide from them, to keep them from. And there has to be an element of real threat, real fear - not for them, Bondi stressed, but for someone. She explained this during rehearsal while practicing walking over hot coals, which wasn’t intentional for making her point but was pretty effective at it.
The adult stuff, the sauciness, as long as it’s only applied to the Caliban character definitely makes her more adult, makes her threat feel more real in a way that Isabella can’t understand. She won’t understand why Sir Barrera half rose out of his seat for the act too and almost shut it down, before Luis settled him down again - because Luis is an English teacher, and Luis has read the original Grimm tales, and Luis knows that Sir Barrera’s reaction to this display is exactly why it is so important to the performance.
And it helps. Because now even the teenagers are curious about why their bodyguard seems so threatened by the horny robot. They don’t understand because it’s the part of the show that they’re really liking, so they’re not going to interrogate if there’s a problem with it.
Critical successes:
The four year old Herman is hiding behind Isabella, and Isabella is encouraging him to point out Caliban when he sees her, so Ariel can save the show - something Bondi planned to say, but is delighted to pretend was Isabella’s idea.
Gwen, the fourteen year old mathematician? This is absolutely the criteria of a person who has a yawning void in them that they aren't aware of, and tries to fill it completely with the first thing that makes them aware of it. She has learned that she really, really, really likes robots. This will take a bit of time to mature, but right now she’s trying to understand feelings she didn’t know she was capable of having, and she’s going to straight up ice a bitch that gets between her and the source of the feelings she’s trying to interrogate.
Successes:
Pablo, the failson magician? He’s studying the act intensely, like, fiercely. He’s in full “oh shit I accidentally wandered in a masterclass” mode. The fact that the tricks themselves are simple and ones he understands well? Means that he’s watching someone do the performance better. It is one thing to be humbled by someone doing it better than you - another to be humbled by someone doing exactly what you do, but better.
Failures:
Selena the success daughter can admire presentation, but she’s suffered through enough of Pablo doing these tricks and the new packaging just doesn’t do it for her. Her patience is cracked, now, because it came pre-stressed. She’s not pissed off at you, she’s pissed off at her brother and Bondi is just reminding her too much of him.
Jordan, the punk skater with no impulse control? Yeah, unlike Gwen he knows what his feelings are and what he likes about them. The show’s good, and he loves spectacle, but also he’s just kind of shitty-horny, and if he keeps being too low-impulse-control about it - Barrera’s a caged tiger at the moment, and this is something that could break the lock on it.
Wild Cards:
Luca, the other twin, is still playing his console. And Oscar, the sweater vest book kid, is sitting at the front, just drinking it all in. It doesn’t read so much as quiet as on the spectrum - He’s just thinking so hard about what he’s seeing that he’s forgetting to show it on his face most of the time. For now he’s as much of a closed book as the one pressed tight against his lap, but at least unlike Luca he’s not being distracted by it.
Juan, the Eton blazer kid, is next to Sir Barrera, so he’s close enough to hear him angrily whispering into his bluetooth headset about the surprise guest. He’s not mollified at the justification given, about how it’d ruin the magic, but Barrera’s the world’s biggest hypocrite inside his head because he’s not going to stop the show over it now for the same reason. Not when Isabella is getting to feel like Herman’s knight in shining armor right now.
Juan just tells him he’s got to use the bathroom and slips away.
Green;
Luis office was clean. That’s not a failure to find something, though, that’s succeeding at finding nothing. The significance of that could mean a few things that could be useful - is it because he resents his wife’s corruption, is it because his wife doesn’t trust him to be a part of it, or is it something else?
A shiny-headed guard sits with his back to you on the narrow stair back down from the attic. This isn’t his post, but he’s using the step to eat a sandwich from a lunchbox and pull out a tin of dip tobacco - the stuff actually got a lot more popular with modern bespoke cultivars which got rid of most of the aftertaste and side effects. It’s a sign he’s making himself comfortable.
It’s only him, except the attic stair down to the second floor is barely more than shoulder width. How do you solve this, and what’s your move after that?
[You’re totally blind right now is the thing, in a place you know almost nothing about, and a lot of the prompts I’d give use information locked behind risk. Just choosing a direction to head in (like ‘down’) or a method of finding a direction (Find where it’s quietest) (Find where there are the most guards) would work best here.]
Crystal & Fiona:
Fiona asks; “Why did this suddenly become worth robbing a bank over?”
Crystal answers; “The day before I was planning this debacle, the Supreme Court will announce its decision that all transhumans are subhuman. And we aren’t allowed to tell anyone.”
Fiona absorbs this a moment, though she’s faster about it. “I can rob a bank for you,” she says, holding her wrists up and drawing one of the tethers out of them. “If you want. I’ve done it before.”