Real Name: James Robinson Age: 15 Gender: Male [hider=Appearance:][img=http://www.enderwiggin.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Asa-Butterfield2.jpg][/hider] In-Game Name: Jay Rayne Race: Elf Class: Dualist Subclass: Criminal (Player-killer) [hider=Appearance In-Game:][img=http://fc01.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2012/035/6/3/the_keeper_by_loika-d4old01.jpg][/hider] About: Offline, James is funny, happy, and always relaxed. He's smart enough and popular with most everyone. He enjoys playing soccer just about as much as he enjoys reading a good book. James' online persona, Jay, is the exact opposite. James enjoys playing the villain in games because he thinks that they's more interesting to play as, and in SFO, Jay is about as bad as a player can be. He is a player-killer, someone who actively hunts other players for their items and weapons. Jay farms noobs for free levels and assassinates higher-leveled players for gear. Some might call it cheating, but James, through Jay, calls it "playing the game". Jay acts friendly and nice, but the second you let your guard down he'll have slipped a dagger between your computerized ribs. He's gone by the time you've respawned. Experienced players aren't so easy to take advantage of, but a few quests is usually enough to earn their trust. Once that happens, they fall no different than the noobs. Well, slightly different than the noobs: they give better gear. James knows that not every player will fall for his act, and Jay is a very capable battler. Attack and defense? Useless. Health and magic? Boring. Jay is a glass cannon fully invested in one thing: speed. Dual-wielding twin silver rapiers with daggers as backup and for throwing, Jay is a blur on the battlefield. A huge sword or a magical nuke will do a whole lot of good if your character is dead before they can attack. This is usually when Jay's real attitude gets to come out and play. He's an arrogant, cocky, apathetic A-hole. Jay is about the closest thing SFO has to a serial killer. James bought SFO simply because all of his friends were getting it. He'd never been big into online games, preferring single-player RPGs. Due to a backorder problem, James' copy or SFO didn't arrive until a week after the game was released. He'd planned on playing with all of his friends from the first day and leveling up with them, but that didn't exactly work out. Once he started playing, James was surprised at how much more he like playing online with people he didn't know. As just another nameless person, he could be anyone and do anything. His friends had expected him to play a human warrior class at first since it was his first time really playing this type of game, but he decided to go with something more creative. Since he'd never experienced any other class, he never noticed whether or not it was harder or easier to learn. A few days after James got his copy of SFO, Jay had surpassed James' friends' characters in levels. Who knew that he was so good at MMOs?