Board Thread:Off Topic/@comment-26397825-20160524033118/@comment-14138255-20160526164234

SomeoneYouUsedToKnow wrote: ACWeapons wrote: @Someone: What if the girl mistakes her enjoyment for sadism with accomplishment? I mean, she was young at the time the robbery happened. She had no fear, no hesitation, she could have easily mixed up her emotions from a psychological standpoint seeing as she didn't know what it was like to truly express the proper emotions. She might have, in reality, tried to end the threat out of empathy. That glance in the mirror could have affected her outlook on the emotion, mistaking protection for sadism and fostering the sadism as she grew up. That's certainly an interesting interpretation.

Following that interpretation, maybe I could make it so that at first, it wasn't real sadism, but instead was like you said, but belief that it was turned it into real sadism. Believe things hard enough and they happen, after all. I suppose if we're on the subject of sociopathy in a Huntsmen (assume it's about a Huntress, if not...oh)

My character of Gwyn Marshall (From Team FLAG) has a problem with being an actual Huntsmen, only in it to fight Grimm. Unlike Yang, Gwyn can't honestly say he cares about the people around him and is oblivious to people's attitudes unless they concern him (which means he only cares about his sociopathy because other people care).