*finishes munching on his beef jerky, wondering if he should've actually not been lazy since he didn't get a proper meal* [@HaleyTheRandom] I ended up making one final addition in shortly after I posted that to you [s](I'm not a perfectionist, shut up)[/s], but it wasn't too major; mostly just involved some of the content that's actually contained within the "writing mental disorders" thread and why I consider the feedback there useful even to people who have done a lot of research on the topic. Hopefully my mind will [i]leave me alone[/i] about the thread now. As for accents; it's actually kind of interesting picturing you sounding like a southerner to be honest. As for my own accent... yeah, it's distinctly Aussie, but I'm not as bad as some of the stereotypes you might see on TV (I actually was thinking about trolling one of the next people in our little group who I get to introduce myself to on voice chat, basically putting on a really bad "Crocodile Hunter" accent until I reveal I'm just bullshitting you). On another note, [@Ailyn Evensen] actually has a bit of a long-standing joke with me involving accents; she insists that people in Oregon don't actually have an accent despite the fact that I explicitly hear an accent in her voice. Really, while we Aussies probably sound exotic to you guys, you're the ones who sound different to us; it's all subjective. [@Gowi] Listening to the back and forth between you and Haley keeps making it more apparent to me how many [i]different[/i] types of role-plays you guys have all had in comparison to me. I've done a fair bit of role-playing but most of it (at least in terms of play-by-post) has been using my main story project's setting, with only a few exceptions on some of the old role-playing forums I joined in my first few years. Really, verbal storytelling and plot discussion is where most of my history as a writer has come from. [@Pudding] I know a few people (I [i]think[/i]) who're from Queensland, actually. You mentioned NSW; I'm actually in Sydney.