Imagine a world where every single mistake you make can be rectified by the simple flip of a switch. That's right: Accidentally get eaten by raptors in silly hats? No problem, just use your second life. Got your house burned down by a giant matchstick rebellion? It's all right, let's pretend it never happened. Lose an arm to fire-breathing centipede aliens? Just restart the game already
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Bart is the poster-boy for ADHD. If you asked him what the word 'torture' meant to him, his immediate answer would be 'Keeping still and quiet'. When not under the pressure to keep his identity secret, Bart can be seen everywhere, trying out everything. Quite literally, too - if you don't have the eyes of a speedster. Concentrating on something is just something extremely hard for him. There are two possible reasons for this: One, being the fact that he may not take the task that seriously because it does not sink it as 'real' to him, and two, being the fact that his accelerated perception of time simply makes it slow and boring. Luckily for him, a dynamic job like crime-fighting does not need that much of an attention span. Now, if only high school could be the same
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The closest person he has to a father is Max, his tutor. They have quite an odd, maybe snarky relationship. Bart infuriates Max by being impulsive, impatient and incapable of heeding his advice. Max infuriates Bart by making him do everything at a normal pace. Despite their occasional banter, Bart really looks up to Max and wants to do him proud. For example: When Inertia, Thaddeus Thawne, impersonated Bart and surpassed him in many aspects, Bart took the praise Max had given Thad as an indication that his own performance was a disappointment, and was pretty down as a result. However, after Bart saved his life and Max gave him heartfelt praise of his own, Bart perked up and consciously tried to improve his performance to live up to it
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