I'm sorry if you can't recognise the mascot of a principal gaming company,
Do you realize that according to
your link. That company
went out of business ten years ago? I have a difficult time considering a company that ceased to exist a decade ago a "principal gaming company." I'm pretty confidant I could go to my local gamestop or computer parlour, pick out a dozen people at random and ask them all to name every gaming company they can think of, and not one of them would blurt out SNK Playmore.
you're clearly predisposed towards specific... things
Yes, and I listed those predispotions in the original post. I said straight away that:
1)
"I need to write dialogue, so if you ask for something I've never heard of, I'm probably going to veto"2)
"characters must be reasonably able to fit into both the Let's Play format, as well as the game world itself"
Terry Bogard fails both of those. Amusingly, I think I've actually
played some of the Fatal Fury arcade games, but Terry is such an unmemorable character that I didn't even recognize his name. And as far as fitting into the format, I just don't see a way to write entertaining dialogue for a character who, so far as I can tell from the youtube videos I watched, has four different stock phrases and does nothing but repeat them when he punches or kicks people.
Look at some of the submissions that have been rejected. Consider Captain Bunch: do a google search for "captain brunch" and nothing resembling the character shows up on the first page of results, nor does he show up in the image search. If even google doesn't know who this character is, I think it's reasonable to call him fairly obscure.
Compare to some of the examples I gave in the OP: James Bond, Jean Gray, Wolverine, Superman. These are characters who've all been major characters in multiple movies that at least tens of millions of people have seen. Fox Mulder and Naruto are primary protagonist television characters from series' with hundreds of episodes. Ask any random passerby on the street if they know who "the guy from x-files" is, and odds are pretty good they're going to say yes.
Even the least well known examples I gave, Groo and Galactus, have their own wiki page for themselves personally, and if you had no idea who the characters are and did an image search for their names, you'd know immediately which one was them. Comparitively, some of the submissions in this thread...not only do the characters being submitted have no entry, the
entire source material they come from has no entry.
Not all of them are totally obscure. Tom Bombadil is not totally obscure. But he wouldn't work in this environment any more than Galactus would, and it comes as no surprise that when the Lord of the Rings trilogy was made into movies, he was omitted from those movies.
Here we're going on an adventure, and yet people are submitting character like Tom Bombadil who was pretty much defined by his non-interest in going adventuring, or for that matter having much of anything to do with the story he was in at all. Here I've asked for characters that I can write dialogue for, yet people are submitting characters like Terry Bogard who apparently has only about four stock phrases that he repeats over and over. Here I've stated that I want characters I'm familiar with, and yet we're getting characters from webcomics that are so obscure that even google apparently doesn't know who they are.
Do you understand my frustration?
you need to stop jumping down the throat of anyone who doesn't know exactly what you want.
Read the original post. It's pretty obvious what I want. Characters who:
* I'm familiar with
* It's practical to write dialogue for
* Can be written for both by me and the person submitting them in the form of in-character posts in this thread
* Can reasonably be imagined as going on an adventure in a D&D-esque environment without flagrantly breaking their own character.
The last one is slightly vague, which is why I gave examples. You could drop a Star Trek medical doctor into D&D and it would be in character for her to try her best to heal people and insist that she's not a God or magic. Whereas it would be completely out of character for Galactus, who spends most of his time flying around the galaxy eating planets, to hang out with some level 1 adventurers and beat on orcs with swords.
As for the first one, I realize that people can't magically know which characters I know...but the very first rule on the list specified that I wanted characters I'm familiar with, and nowhere do I say anything about webcomics. Why are people submitting characters from webcomics that again...I can type their name into a google search, and no matching results come up....what about that inspires people to think that I'll probably be familiar with that character? I specifically gave Galactus as an example of what not to do. Why exactly was Tom Bombadil submitted? I said no characters who were heroic mimes or so generic that they might as well be, and I made it perfectly clear that I would be writing dialogue for these characters. What about that inspired you to submit a character who says only the same four lines over and over?
I feel like people are competing for who can come up with the most obscure, least developed and most difficult characters to write for.