[quote=@Suku] quick question before I post which side has the least amount of people or needs more interaction with? [/quote] They have about equal but the Hyrule group is split into smaller groups of two or three. It really depends on what you're looking for for the next little while. Hyrule is likely going to be more centered towards character interaction and team building while Gourd Lake is shaping up to be a battlefield. They've got around the same number of actual characters. Did you have a preference on where you'd end up? [quote=@Banana] I went with Atlas and P-Body. Here's their application. [hider=The Duo] [b]Name:[/b] [color=0072bc]Atlas[/color] and [color=f26522]P-Body[/color] [b]Gender:[/b] Technically ambiguous, however Atlas is seen as the masculine one of the duo, and P-Body is the feminine one. [b]Age:[/b] Estimated 2 years. [b]Game:[/b] Portal 2, of the franchise by the same name. [b]Appearance:[/b] [img]http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/half-life/images/9/9d/Atlas_P-body_fhp2.jpg/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/270?cb=20110519013122&path-prefix=en[/img] [b]Equipment:[/b] Atlas carries a Portal Gun (from Portal, obviously), while P-Body carries a Paint Gun (from Aperture Tag, but same universe). [b]Abilities:[/b] They are robots that (in Aperture Laboratories) can be re-assembled with the same knowledge retained before. Unfortunately, they do not have that luxury in this setting. They can ping a marker for the other robot to see though. [b]Weaknesses and Limitations:[/b] Aside from being robots that lack any form of intelligent language, speaking through various beeps and gestures, they cannot use any magic or extraterrestrial powers. Because robots. [b]Personality:[/b] Throughout their testing experience, they have both grown to take on human traits that normally cannot be expressed from robots, like hugging, playing rock-paper-scissors, and even taking a minute to break down some tasty dance moves. As a unit, they value friendship above all else, allowing them to be the embodiment of a perfect testing duo. Sometimes they do pick on eachother, though. [b]Backstory:[/b] As the two test-subjects for Aperture Science's Cooperative Testing Initiative, Atlas and P-Body have spent a vast majority of time together. Through the several-dozen chambers they did inside Aperture Science, then the very few chambers where they were outside of the main testing course. Under GLaDOS' direction, the two companions opened a vault that contained a very large population of cryogenically stored human test subjects, and GLaDOS claimed that the duo "saved science". About a week later. GLaDOS fucked up and killed all of the humans, resorting to Atlas and P-Body to become "killing machines" in order to take out who was currently in charge of the facility. Once Atlas and P-Body took out a major threat to GLaDOS' well being (a bird), GLaDOS took the eggs in the birds nest to raise proper killing machines. Atlas and P-Body were thanked, however. Now, with P-Body receiving a Paint Gun, the two were about to start the new testing initiative designed for them, until this virus happened, splitting them apart from eachother and putting them both in worlds they don't understand. [b]Entry Point:[/b] About to begin the Aperture Tag Co-op section, then split up. [/hider][/quote] It's not a bad CS but suffers from a severe lack of details. I've played both Portal games and the first section of the Co-Op mode and I only understood about a fifth of what you're talking about. Try rewriting the CS with the assumption that no one here has ever [i]heard[/i] of Portal. That includes detailing what the various guns do as well as being more specific about, well pretty much everything. Also knowing which robot is which would be supremely helpful.