I Suddenly Remembered All Of My OCs From My Wattpad Era, The Majority Of Which Are Not Related In Any
I suddenly remembered all of my OCs from my Wattpad era, the majority of which are not related in any way to any canon characters and just vibe in the worlds they live in and then I got an urge to share some stuff about them with you. I doubt I'll go back to writing them even though I still think they're amazing and the backstories for some of them are freaking crazy (in a positive way, I thinking)
So, if any of you would like to indulge, you can go to my asks and give me one of the following fandoms, and I'll respond with random OC from it, either info or art if I drew them or both. Please ask away
Fandoms:
- Percy Jackson (bookseries) 1, 2, 3
- Boku No Hero Academia 1, 2
- Harry Potter Marauders Era (it was before I learned about all of the Rowling bullshit)
Numbers don't mean books or seasons, they meant freaking generations because these things spiral when I think about them too much and I thought about it way more than too much
If like my dearest buddy audhumla-sailor you think some of my two sentence in 14k one-shot ocs (Abigail) are worth further investigating you can ask about them too I'll love it anyway
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concertsasgrouptherapy liked this · 9 months ago
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wandixx liked this · 9 months ago
More Posts from Wandixx
I was thinking about this sotry and then somehow got to nicknames in Batpham, and I'm all there for all bird and bats stuff, but I don't think they can confidently use it in civies. To paranoid for that. So, they have to have other set. Here are my ideas. Though I only have D gang for now.
Dick - Big(est) D (nobody other than him calls him that, his name is nickname enough)
Damian - Little/Baby D (if you're not Dick he will get violent)
And here is the reason I made this whole post:
Duke - Bigger Medium D
Danny - Smaller Medium D
Duke was Medium D before, and they tried to make Danny Small D, but he pointed out there is only a one year difference between them, and he won't let anyone call him small, he isn't that short (he is). So, they added subcategories to Medium
DC X DP Prompt #4
It turns out that one of the things Danny inherited from Bruce was his need to make contingency plans.
Or: Danny's family finds out that he has contingency plans for all of them, including if Danny turns evil and how to permanently stop him
Bruce feels a certain way when he finds out his son has a plan to basically commit suicide.
Tent
Change a single letter and change the word game
I want to play a game with you all.
You have to make a new word by changing only one letter of the last word.
Dirt
![wandixx - Wandixx](https://64.media.tumblr.com/6771e37d5367545d9f47bc173934b95c/c374b173329d6032-db/s500x750/1d63630675a1d3c59d789d4075a6cdaa04482c29.jpg)
![Youre Hearing It More And More](https://64.media.tumblr.com/6f778f6dbea93c0fb04c73164f55a48d/5479a67679c198e5-9b/s500x750/f0c2f64791832fcf9b52eda98c7f874cc9aa4891.png)
you’re hearing it more and more
Suddenly struck with a need to explain to you how boat pronouns work (I work in the marine industry).
When you're talking about the design of the boat, you say "it".
When the boat is still being built, your say "it".
When the boat is nearing completion, you can say "it" or "she".
When the boat is floating in the water you probably say "she", unless there is still a lot of work to be done (e.g. no engine yet) then you say "it".
When the boat is officially launched and operating, you say "she". If you continue to say "it" at this point you are not incorrect but suspiciously untraditional. You are not playing the game.
If you are referring to a boat you don't really know anything about you may say "it" ("there's a big boat, it's coming this way"). But if you know its name, it's probably "she" ("there's the Waverley, she's on her way to Greenock").
If you are talking about boats in general, you say "it" ("when a boat is hit by a wave it heels over")
If you speak about a boat in complimentary terms, it's "she" ("she's a grand boat"). If you are being disparaging it may be it, but not necessarily ("it's as ugly as sin", "she's a grotty old tub").
If she has a boy's name, she's still she. "Boy James", "King Edward", "Sir David Attenborough"? The pronoun is she.
If it's a dumb barge (no engine), you say it. But if it's a rowing boat (no engine), you say she.
I hope this has cleared things up so that you may not be in danger of misgendering floating objects.