i could easily say, right now, that my love for clones has never disappeared….like..i’m all over them again(i can’t help it, men in armor are my weakness) @raven974
clonetrooperecho has a medical condition that can only be treated with pictures of Jesse and Kixs telling Echo how rad Fives was while he was away
And hoh boy was he rad. He piloted things and solved mysteries, there was no downtime around Fives
“and then this guy went AWOL, he busted into and out of Kamino, tried to kill the CHANCELOR and then skedaddled into lower Coruscant where Fox shot him before he could tell Skywalker and Rex the truth.”
I’m pretty sure I got this question like a year ago too and forgot to ever answer it, oops. Anyway: It generally ends in shouting, as is tradition. Other common features:
Cody insists on being banker. No one ever really challenges this.
Rex is surprisingly terrible. Like you might think he’d do okay, but somehow he always ends up losing spectacularly. And then gets passive-aggressively pissy about how the game is “boring/rigged anyway.”
Jesse always ends up in jail.
Kix really likes playing as the top hat, and is not above using emotional manipulation to secure it.
Fives brings the hype and takes big risks. Sometimes they pay out, sometimes they bite him in the ass. Either way, he’s yelling about it.
Echo has encyclopedic knowledge of the rules. This is good in that everyone agrees to defer to him for interpretation and enforcement. But it’s also bad because it makes him resistant to “house rules.” He also tries to insist on auctions, which others prefer to ditch since they slow the game down.
Tup is gullible and lost a lot when he was younger, but eventually becomes a dark horse. He’s a sneaky strategist and not as rambunctious as some of the others, so it’s easy to forget to keep an eye on him. But then BAM, he has all your money.
I think there should be a difference between ignoring Canon as “ignoring the events that happened in canon in order to have a happier ending” and ignoring Canon as “totally ignoring this character’s personality/talents/abilities and changing them to the point of having a completely new character who happens to have the same name as the one in canon”
I think there should be a difference between ignoring Canon as “ignoring the events that happened in canon in order to have a happier ending” and ignoring Canon as “totally ignoring this character’s personality/talents/abilities and changing them to the point of having a completely new character who happens to have the same name as the one in canon”