2. Anything up to and including his parent's murder. Up until that point, he was a relatively happy child. He had his best friend Tommy-- though he was sad when Tommy's dad died in a car crash. His father, Dr. Wayne, wasn't a very attentive father, since he was dedicated to saving people's lives over maintaining his family, but his mother was very loving, and he had Alfred, so despite wishing his father was more active in his life, he was generally happy. He really admired heroes and superheroes like Zorro and Green Lantern (The Alan Scott one) and Grey Ghost.
3. Bruce is never actually genuinely happy. He's lonely, paranoid, and quite possibly one of the biggest voids of broodiness in the City. Sometimes he approaches being "okay", but he never really lets himself get there.
2. Miki was generally pretty happy in his childhood. He spent a lot of time with his twin, and they played the piano together very well-- so well no one could tell that his sister, Kozue, actually played very sloppily, but Miki complimented her so well that it sounded beautiful. He'll also be able to see when Miki fell very ill and wasn't able to perform with his sister, and when they grew apart because of that, and how their parents were also very distant, and eventually abandoned them to boarding school.
3. Miki isn't... unhappy, exactly, but he's lonely. He gets through the day just fine for the most part, but he's never really... happy. Just very neutral. He was much more unhappy in his past, but he's beginning to come to terms with his issues.
2. There isn't much of note in Kyon's childhood. He was a normal boy who believed in aliens and espers and time travelers and such. Just about what you'd expect from a typical Japanese boy, if a bit too imaginative for his own good.
3. Kyon misses his friends now, but he's not miserable. He was happier when he was back home with the Brigade, though he'll deny it and say he would enjoy the break from the shenanigans if this City weren't just as bad as the SOS Brigade.
2. All childhood flashbacks are A-OK: the traumatic horse vs. clown incident, bits and pieces of being shuffled off between foster homes, the house going boom (Headcanon context: her foster father tried to use her to steal stuff and she failed at it once), and how Parker overcame her fear of the dark. Really, the flashbacks are about all we get of her childhood so far.
3. Um. Not happy with her past, but whatever, knows she's weird. A LOT happier with her present because Hardison just showed up. It... fluctuates a lot. It's very easy to make her happy in the short-term, but underneath she's got a lot of issues.
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2. Anything up to and including his parent's murder. Up until that point, he was a relatively happy child. He had his best friend Tommy-- though he was sad when Tommy's dad died in a car crash. His father, Dr. Wayne, wasn't a very attentive father, since he was dedicated to saving people's lives over maintaining his family, but his mother was very loving, and he had Alfred, so despite wishing his father was more active in his life, he was generally happy. He really admired heroes and superheroes like Zorro and Green Lantern (The Alan Scott one) and Grey Ghost.
3. Bruce is never actually genuinely happy. He's lonely, paranoid, and quite possibly one of the biggest voids of broodiness in the City. Sometimes he approaches being "okay", but he never really lets himself get there.
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2. Miki was generally pretty happy in his childhood. He spent a lot of time with his twin, and they played the piano together very well-- so well no one could tell that his sister, Kozue, actually played very sloppily, but Miki complimented her so well that it sounded beautiful. He'll also be able to see when Miki fell very ill and wasn't able to perform with his sister, and when they grew apart because of that, and how their parents were also very distant, and eventually abandoned them to boarding school.
3. Miki isn't... unhappy, exactly, but he's lonely. He gets through the day just fine for the most part, but he's never really... happy. Just very neutral. He was much more unhappy in his past, but he's beginning to come to terms with his issues.
Reply
2. There isn't much of note in Kyon's childhood. He was a normal boy who believed in aliens and espers and time travelers and such. Just about what you'd expect from a typical Japanese boy, if a bit too imaginative for his own good.
3. Kyon misses his friends now, but he's not miserable. He was happier when he was back home with the Brigade, though he'll deny it and say he would enjoy the break from the shenanigans if this City weren't just as bad as the SOS Brigade.
Reply
2. All childhood flashbacks are A-OK: the traumatic horse vs. clown incident, bits and pieces of being shuffled off between foster homes, the house going boom (Headcanon context: her foster father tried to use her to steal stuff and she failed at it once), and how Parker overcame her fear of the dark. Really, the flashbacks are about all we get of her childhood so far.
3. Um. Not happy with her past, but whatever, knows she's weird. A LOT happier with her present because Hardison just showed up. It... fluctuates a lot. It's very easy to make her happy in the short-term, but underneath she's got a lot of issues.
Reply
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