Technically I have a CS in development: [hider=Massive WIP] [center][img]https://fontmeme.com/permalink/180601/a96e0055e41f67e46dfdc65fd475e217.png[/img] [img]http://gamemovie.net/game/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/6-5-560x747.jpg[/img] [quote=Ei Yu, reciting a Chinese idiom][color=C89B71][b]“When one man is ready to risk his life, ten thousand men cannot defeat him.”[/b][/color][/quote][/center] [h3]Personal Dossier[/h3][hr][sub][color=C89B71][b]Name[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Ei Yu[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Age[/b][/color][/sub][indent]25[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Date of Birth[/b][/color][/sub][indent]December 28th, 1923[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Gender[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Female[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Origin[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Nanjing, Republic of China[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Appearance[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Ei Yu can slip into a Chinese crowd with little difficulty – her appearance being that of a common poor Chinese woman of adult age. She stands at a full 5’2”, the stock average of her gender among her fellow eastern and southeastern Asians. She’s well-toned after a decade of fighting and conditioning against Japanese Imperialists and keeps up a martial arts regimen in order to keep herself “centered” and ready for anything. Her hair is a dark brown-black and she has brown eyes with an unassuming appearance that is often made even moreso with the choice of clothing that is more reminiscent of a dǒulì-toting rice farmer than the resistance soldier that she is.[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Personality[/b][/color][/sub][indent]-[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Classification[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Designated Marksman[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Equipment[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Arisaka 38 Bolt-Action Rifle Model 26 Hammerless Revolver[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Background[/b][/color][/sub][indent]-[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Experience[/b][/color][/sub][indent]Yu was nearing her fourteenth birthday when the Imperial Japanese Army attacked Nanjing, an event that she considers the one thing that changed her life. Eventually she found herself involved within the Chinese Liberation Movement, a group of freedom fighters that represented China much like how the French Resistance had done so for France [albeit unsuccessfully]. The date she “officially” joined is hard to say, but it would have to have occurred at the earliest in 1941, around four years after the massacre. Though Yu herself considers Nanjing as the day of her “recruitment”. Her induction into the cross-faction “experimental” squadron, the 914, has come from a decade of experience, though most veteran soldiers would consider Yu’s experience as representing more of skirmishes and ambushes rather than a true field of battle. There are exceptions with a decade of fighting, of course, but being a female soldier comes with its share of prejudices and misconceptions. [/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Relations[/b][/color][/sub][indent]-[/indent] [sub][color=C89B71][b]Theme[/b][/color][/sub][indent][url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICL061nPcA8]San Nien by Li Xiang Lan[/url][/indent] [/hider] Just to publicly confirm and all.