Headcanongenerator

Overview

  • Founded Date July 4, 1983
  • Posted Jobs 0
  • Viewed 11

Company Description

Biographies of My Headcanon Characters PokéBeach com Forums

I actually think that level of power is a real trap for actual roleplayers. I know exactly what you mean by jaded characters. I think that goes along with being very powerful. After all, if you can just port yourself to another dimension, or whatever, you don’t have a whole lot of reason to be that concerned about this one. Which always left me wondering why even be a hero in the first place if you don’t really care about what happens to this world.

We are an international collaboration of talented individuals who have come together to display the creative abilities of people on the autism spectrum and others who are neurodivergent. Our mission is to provide a forum to connect with those who wish to employ these abilities. The Art of Autism accepts many art forms, including blog posts, art, poetry, video submissions and requests for book and film reviews. We seek diverse viewpoints including those from autistic people, parents, siblings, therapists, and others. We look to partner with organizations with similar goals for awareness, acceptance, educational events and the provision of opportunities for our participants.

Every explanation of the purpose of a ritual, every mountain, every blade of grass, the name of the store merchant that appeared for a single page and was never mentioned again, all of it. Lore makes up the backbone of any good story or setting. Of course, there’s only one real lore about any one setting. However, the shows and books I consumed would occasionally have characters that I felt behaved very autistic which would make me immediately relate to them. AI-powered story generator that writes creative stories for you.

In discussing headcanons, let’s start by getting incredibly jokey ones out of the way. Plenty of the time, when people say they have ‘x’ headcanon generator, they’re not really saying that they interpret a character in the text to be, say, a furry, but that it’s funny to imagine them as such. This is clearly not a reading and is primarily done for humor’s sake, so I’ll be excluding it in this discussion because it’s not particularly relevant. What we’re interested in here are headcanons which indicate a given person’s actual understanding of the world, the story, or the characters within it, even if that understanding isn’t actually based on the text to any significant extent. For instance, if someone says that they headcanon generation a character as trans, they usually genuinely believe that the character is trans to at least some extent. These days authors and creators take a large portion of their inspiration from religious precedents.

In April 2010, the LiveJournal community headcanonftw[13] was created to share theories from different fandoms. The term dates back to Ronald Knox’s 1911 essay “Studies in the Literature of Sherlock Holmes” to distinguish Holmes stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle from those penned by fans of the character. The term “headcanon” has been used to describe fan-given traits since as early as July 2007, when a LiveJournal fanfiction author used the term to describe her interpretation of the mother of Gwen from the animated sci-fi franchise Ben 10. This is “Just a Reminder,” where current fan discussions spark up commentary on comic book history. This time around, a debate about what comic book characters would or would not do leads to a reminder that headcanons only exist in your head – character histories go way beyond that.