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I do the occasional writing and the arting, and by occasional, I mean "all the damn time". I'll try [almost] everything once.

Favorite Genres: Urban Fantasy/Supernatural/Occult, Flintlock Fantasy, Sword & Sorcery, Sci-Fi, Fandoms*
*Fandom RPs are extremely case by case.

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IC has a post 0 ready for your consumption :)
Of course. 18+ is primarily there just as a safety net due to certain elements a 1950s nazi-occupied America might have. Any spice that occurs after a fade to black can be handled appropriately.
The Investigator - Benjamin Carter
Benjamin Carter, aged 33 (presuming 1950s); son of a professional boxer-turned-WWI veteran and a teacher. Ben served as an Army Ranger in the Allied Expeditionary Force, primarily in the Mediterranean theater, until the turning tides brought more troops home in anticipation for an attack on the continental US. When the Free World bent the knee, a part of Ben broke, and he's been making ends meet ever since

Ben is tall, broad of shoulder and deep of chest, supple with steely muscle. Bearing striking Aryan features has turned out a formidable boon in the new social strata - a strong chin and jaw, high cheekbones, blond hair, and an well-shaped nose, despite being evidently broken a few times. Though he rarely smiles, it's a charmer when he does, and his casually stern features go along with his husky timbre.

1955, Nazi-Occupied Los Angeles, Hollywoodland

Summer rolled in to the City of Angels same as it always did: hotter than hell. Perhaps it was a sign of the times, how the Land of the Free had lost her soul beneath the heel of a jackboot, ground up like a fag smoked to the butt, not that you could tell looking out the window. Then again, wasn’t that the nature of selling one’s soul to the devil?

Benjamin Carter always found himself waxing such depressing eloquence on his way to the office. His whole adult life was thrown into the Expeditionary Force, having bought the spiel hook, line, and sinker; be a man, be the best you can be! See the world!

What a crock of shit.

All Ben had to show for it was a tangle of tags and a case of medals that weren’t worth the metal they were stamped on. All the blood and guts for Lady Liberty to spread her legs for der fuhrer when he came a-knocking. The billboard across from Ben’s office window proclaimed the Inglewood Reclamation Initiative and ”realizing the American Dream with German engineering,” a flag waving overhead, the fifty stars replaced by the red, white, and the black hooked cross of the Reich. Ben’s tongue curled in distaste, resisting the urge to spit.

For once, he was thankful for the draft in the dreary office he called home, giving the slightest reprieve as the angry sunlight sliced through the shutters of Ben’s blinds. Slumping into his chair with the slightest groan of protest beneath his bulk, Ben shook out a cigarette from a case. He’d just put iron on the Calhoun case, pulling an all-nighter taking photos too spicy for Hustler even before the Reich’s puritanical publicists got a hold of the media. It wasn’t dignified work, but it kept the lights on.

Ben Carter, Private Investigator, had barely hung up his hat and lit up his smoke before his phone rang. Steely, stormy blue eyes flashed to the headset, rattling in the cradle with an equal measure of frustration and bone-gnawing exhaustion. The phone, like everything else, was kraut-made. On that principle alone, Ben let the damn thing ring.

As expected, it rang again, and Ben took his sweet time pouring a healthy sniff of scotch from the bottle he kept in his desk. He sampled the woodsy aroma appreciatively, sampling a taste and taking a puff from the cigarette pinched between his fingers.

Nothing like a Glenlivet for lunch, he mused, appreciating a ghost of a good mood before whatever was on the other side of the phone snuffed it out. Dusting ashes from the fag, Ben snatched up the phone,

“Carter PI,” Ben said, voice as smooth as a mile of gravel road.

“Good day to you too, Mister Carter,” came the chiding voice of Mrs. Abernathy, his landlady and the closest thing Ben had to a secretary, even if she did go through all his mail. She was an older broad who had her hayday in the roaring Twenties. If she was to be believed, she was once a fine catch in a flapper dress, not that anyone would know now.

“Missus Abernathy, charmed as ever,” Carter lied with his native country-boy drawl, raising a hand to his face to rub his eyes. “How may I help you today, ma’am?”

“Your rent is late. Again. You have until the end of the week to get it square before I find a tenant more stable, let alone respectable,” Abernathy sneered. It was the same old song and dance. Ben did a job, got stiffed on expenses, and barely skirted by. It beat the fancy pension of a policeman wearing those damned armbands, anyway. Who said integrity had a price?

Ben took another long drag on his cigarette before answering. Biting the old bat’s head off over the phone was an exercise in futility, anyway. “Of course, I apologize, ma’am. I’ll get you squared up before then. Is there anything else?”

“Matter of fact, there is,” Abernathy crowed.

Christ alive, here we go… Ben seethed inwardly, rolling his eyes.

“There’s a gentleman here to see you, Mister Carter. Do you want me to send him up?” She asked in a manner that didn’t really imply a question.

“I actually just started my lunch hour, Mrs. Abernathy, perha– “

“Of course, Mr. Carter, I’ll send him right up,” Abernathy interjected. There was a shuffle of a hand over the receiver on the other end, “Mr. Carter says he’ll see you right away, sir. Fifth floor, first room on your right. Mhm. Guten tag, mein herr,” she called, sounding like everyone’s sweetheart great aunt. Why didn’t she ever talk to Ben like that?

“Make yourself presentable, you bum. No need to thank me.” Ever the one to get the last word in, Abernathy hung up with an ear-stabbing ring. Taking a deep breath, Ben surveyed his office. Lined with bookshelves and filing cabinets with no shortage of overflow, it was a cluttered and stuffy mess, enough to give any self-respecting librarian a conniption, but Ben knew his way around it. Reverse Filing, he called it. Bits and bobs from his last case hung on a cork-board on the far wall, emptied scotch bottles lined along the windowsill as improvised vases for wilting flowers. Faded photos from his tour in the Mediterranean hung in cheap frames, showing a younger and far prouder Benjamin Carter, back when his life meant something, and he had friends that didn’t rely on money.

Ashing his cigarette again, Ben rummaged through his drawers for a bakelite comb, smoothing his bedraggled blonde hair. He straightened his tie and tried to tug the rumples out of his shirt to little avail. He could hear the shuffle and stop of shoes up the stairs, then saw a silhouette fill the frame of the smoked glass that marked Ben’s office.

The knock was soft, but authoritative. Deciding to roll up his sleeves to hide the slept-in look of his shirt, Ben placed his comb back, fingers brushing the handle of his 1911. It was illegal to own, and he knew it. That didn’t stop every greaser, gangster, spick, and kraut from packing a heater of their own.

“It’s open,” Benjamin called, eyeing the door expectantly.
OOC for plotting and brainstorming if required.
@Dead Cruiser The Barret is still used for obvious reasons, it's a workhorse of a rifle. I suggested the Lynx because of the smaller profile, making it easier to maneuver in tight confines. Thankfully, the D.O.G.S. armory is no slouch, so depending on what you think is most appropriate for a mission, you'll be able to switch things up if you have the time and access to the quartermaster.

And good lord. Yeah, that'll do it.
My character is coming together. Might write up the sheet tonight or tomorrow.

He's modified a .50 cal sniper rifle into something the size of an assault rifle. His approach to "decapitating" vampires is more akin to "turning the entire top half of their body into salsa."


Might I suggest the GM6 Lynx or the 50 Beowulf. Both are bonafide "T-Rex Guns", but the Lynx sound like it's what you're looking for.

youtube.com/watch?v=oGmcf6qjI7g
Well, I better dust off my panzerhand, by the looks of it.
@StormWolf Cool. A dhampyr is my current plan, yes. I imagine the Regents maintaining their own sort of small cell of problem-solvers, which my character would be a member. Hopefully we get a little leeway for our depiction of vampire society?

As well, given the general World of Darkness inspiration readily apparent, should we consider vampire powers to be on about a similar level?


More or less, yes. Things like Oblivion and Blood Sorcery would be some Elder Vampire level shit, though.

Now, I'm going to grumble to myself about the Losombra over here. Proceed :)
Working out my character. Would it be possible to play someone who is working with the Sentinels in a sort of "joint operations" capacity? What I have in mind is a fixer that works on behalf of the vampire Regents that is "on loan" to this particular Sentinel cell.


Yes, that's totally viable. I presume a living vampire or dhampyr?
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