[@Lmpkio] [quote=@Lmpkio] Indeed. It started off well, but then two came in and bashed it on the head. I also believe this is at fault. I would've at least two alternate canon characters, one from say Talon --> Overwatch and the reverse Overwatch --> Talon. This wasn't just pushing, this was a pretty strong shove and with little fairness. They wanted something else outside of this RP, a gaming multiverse or something, and not just what it's supposed to be. That's a disaster waiting to happen for nearly any GM who can take things to heart (I mean everyone can/does to a certain extent). But yeah, the ideas presented as said are pretty cool. Maybe someone can rebirth this concept with a slightly more detailed flair (Spoiler Alert: Not me - I got shit to do atm and will probably not be the best GM) but honestly who knows. [/quote] Which was weird too. I mean, I get some people like things done a certain way, but these guys really went at it like they were insulted at how different it was from what they wanted. Some rps just aren't for everyone, and shouldn't be. I hate to say this because I don't like to be exclusionary but when something is so far off from what you want to do, and you don't have to do it, don't do it. The first character I was going to do would've problem been an Original from one of the shonen series like One Piece or Bleach. Might've even revived Abigail from the last multiverse rp. For the other one, I wanted to do something close to a silent, righteous angry character, whose strong and good with a gun, similar to the Doomslayer from Doom 2016, because I've been currently playing Doom 2016 Hmmm. I might give it a try later on, because I really want to do an rp, but will probably wait a bit since the last multiverse roleplay I tried setting up got literally zero interest. Probably because I was trying to get everyone to brainstorm from the get go as opposed to having anything solid right off the bat *.*; [@Sierra] That's probably true, but it didn't seem like Hex and Arch were actively giving criticism as opposed to pushing for things to be done in a way they wanted it to be done.