Might as well have fun with it, npt a fun trip without some odd balls. [hider= Diederick Von Brandt] [center] [img]https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/738099575805444128/947257930468687872/Screenshot_20220226_220343_com.android.chrome_edit_4533217681222346.jpg[/img][/center] [b]Diederick Von Brandt:[/b] [b]Age:[/b] 47 [b]What Brings you Here?:[/b] A brief explanation of how or why you’re on the train. Think of it like a small backstory. Diederick Von Brandt, oldest son and inheritor of an old German industrial group was far from a man who wanted to spend all his days in the board room or at a fancy gathering. As a young man joining the Military against his father but stopping short of disinheriting, hoping letting his son's rebellion phase play out was far from successful. Gaining a love for the outdoors and the wilds. Taking his money and a huge risk he privately financed a dig in South America, a hunch and a claim in dusty old Spanish maps that lead to finding a lost city in jungle. Using his family wealth and becoming a smartly dressed Indiana Jones come explorer and gentleman adventurer of older years. Surprisingly successful in his adventures, selling the stories and rights to fund his further expeditions along side family funds much to his younger sisters aggravation who takes a more hands on role with the family firms management. Taking the train for a little civilization and luxury after 6 months following an investigation in arctic regions to locate the wreck of a lost arctic expedition a century ago. You could fly a jet any day, but a luxury train was way more intresting snd exciting. Polite and a gentleman, somewhat of a man born a century too late when everything had been found and everything was organised rather than exploring. Still in good shape for his age, active and more than a little eccentric... Who else would hunt temples in jungles voluntarily? Becoming somewhat well known from books and nees media, his private exploration company has traveled from ice, to snow and jungle writing a number of books about his findings in the form of a journal crossed with a factual account. However he has been regarded as anything from a daring rogue to a relic in modern times or considered a lucky fluke by academics to name a few of his more polite references. [/hider]