04 September 2019 @ 07:34 am
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Name: Ivan.
Age: 21+.
Contact info: [plurk.com profile] bondrewd or PM.

Character: Eren Yeager.
Canon: Attack on Titan.
Canon Point: End of chapter 119.
CRAU, Canon AU: n/a.
Character age: 19.

Canon Abilities/Powers: Practically speaking, Eren's powers are rather limited in scope; he has regeneration which can restore even lost limbs and functions so long as his spinal cord isn't severed, and the ability to transform into a 15-meter-tall giant that shares his ability to regenerate, though in a much more amplified manner. In this form, which is known as a "Titan," he can harden his body to create a sort of armored shell, though it's most powerful when focused on small parts of his body, such as his knuckles. He can also create structures not a part of his body, which he can form into shapes as he pleases, such as spikes or simple weaponry.

Outside of the supernatural, he also has immense capabilities as a soldier, being one of the finest of his country's military, as well as likely being the most experienced hand-to-hand fighter in his world; he can shoot a rifle, ride a horse, and has great acrobatic skill, along with a level of stamina that is generally unmatched.

What is their greatest negative emotion towards an object, situation, or person in their past?: His dread for the future. Placed in a situation which necessitates either the death of his race or that of the rest of the world, Eren spends years struggling to come up with a solution that sacrifices neither. This anguish torments him, eats away at him for as long as he has to deliberate on it, until eventually the despair has left only the mission, and himself to complete it. Eren, for better or for worse, made his choice, and though it kills him to do it, he'll keep on moving forward until his enemies are destroyed.

How strongly do they feel about the negative subject matter, on the scale of one to ten?: Ten. It is his, and at the same time, his series' central conflict, which asks the reader if they themselves could justify their choice the way Eren did.

What is their greatest virtue?: His uncompromising morality. Faced with a terrible choice between his people and the rest of the world, Eren chooses his own, an option that sentences mankind to extinction. Why he does this is a simple matter of what it means to him to be free; he would rather end the world than let a singular girl and her children suffer, becoming livestock to perpetuate a cycle that necessitates their sacrifices. To him, that is more important, more justifiable than surrendering himself and his country to the desires of humanity, desires which would spell doom for him and everyone he loves.

How aware are they of their virtue, on a scale from one to ten?: Ten. At some point, the thought occurred to him that were his island to take on the sins that the world imposed onto them, far fewer people would die than if he were to enact his plan to rumble the rest of the world underfoot. But an end like that was one he could not abide by, and so he remains unyielding.

Items: A spare hooded jacket. His rifle and bayonet, with a box of ammunition.

Samples: log #1
log #2
log #3

Special notes