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I heard that in order to make a crossover character profile, it has to explicitly stated to be a different character from the original source material, and contribute to this new material (story wise), and must have different “characterization”... My question is, why?
Most characters don’t act differently just because they’re in a new setting, it would break the character. I’m just not understanding why a needlessly tight rule is there.
I ask, because I am, admittedly, going to make a Sonic (Shin Megami Tensei) profile, as he has his own self-contained story that doesn’t conflict with the main story (and thus cause scaling problems), and possesses skills and abilities he didn’t have in his original state. Similarly, I plan to revive Nero (Shin Megami Tensei) as well, for the same reason.
Most characters don’t act differently just because they’re in a new setting, it would break the character. I’m just not understanding why a needlessly tight rule is there.
I ask, because I am, admittedly, going to make a Sonic (Shin Megami Tensei) profile, as he has his own self-contained story that doesn’t conflict with the main story (and thus cause scaling problems), and possesses skills and abilities he didn’t have in his original state. Similarly, I plan to revive Nero (Shin Megami Tensei) as well, for the same reason.
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