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Tony ❝ι've мade a нυge мιѕтaĸe❞ Stark ([personal profile] arcreact) wrote2010-05-21 04:40 pm
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OUT OF CHARACTER
Player Name: Mel
Are you 16 or older: Yep
Contact: [plurk.com profile] aelesti
Current Characters: N/A
Tag: Tony Stark (MCU)

IN CHARACTER
Name: Anthony "Tony" Edward Stark
Canon: Marvel Cinematic Universe
Canon Point: Post-Avengers, pre-Iron Man 3
Age: 42

History: one | two

Personality:
Tony is the kind of duplicitous character that builds up a set of walls and masks (or has false masks attributed to him) -- practically a mythos, in his case -- that get presented to the world at large as the sum total of who he is. This isn’t entirely unusual, especially for celebrities, but in Tony’s case, those who get to know him start to understand that his public persona and actual person aren’t just dissimilar. In some ways, they’re polar opposites.

Tony is a successful socialite; he can navigate a cocktail party or a board room or a senate hearing or a press conference with what appears like flawless ease, but at the end of the day, he prefers to isolate himself, to hermit away with a very small circle of trusted people, a not-insignificant number of whom are AIs of his own creation. He sometimes boasts his accomplishments and virtues in grandiose displays of ego (an elaborate, armored entrance to his own Expo in Iron Man 2, complete with cheerleaders), and though he is genuinely proud of some of those accomplishments, he’s also riddled with guilt and ever-present doubt (Is this the right way to go about things? How many mistakes could he have avoided making?). He feigns casual, aloof indifference, despite how many of his problems stem from just how much and how deeply he cares about those around him and the things that are important to him (Happy accuses him of ignoring Pepper at the start of Iron Man 3, but joke’s on Happy, Tony’s been cyber stalking the entire time!). He comes off as arrogant and self-assured, but he’s riddled with PTSD and anxiety after coming toe-to-toe with aliens, magic, gods--things he can’t easily explain or quantify, and he’s humble enough to know that, compared to forces like that, he’s “just a man in a can”. People see him as selfish and self-obsessed (SHIELD has him pegged as a textbook narcissist incapable of teamwork, and Steve tells him he only fights for himself, that he’ll never be the person to play the sacrifice card), and he doesn’t particularly see himself as a hero -- indeed, doesn’t even include himself when rattling off a list of the Avengers to Loki -- and yet he’s willing to sacrifice his life to carry a nuke through a portal into space, if it means saving New York City. He doesn’t even think twice about it.

All of these misnomers can make Tony seem, depending on the position of the observer, like he has his shit together way more than he does; like he cares about things far less than he does; like he’s far more irresponsible than he actually is; like he’s far more hedonistic and self-obsessed than he actually is; and on and on and on. And this isn’t to say that none of Tony’s stereotypes have any basis in reality, because indeed they do (he definitely has a partying, playboy past), but the truth behind Tony Stark lives in those glimpses underneath the media buzz and harshly worded SHIELD character profiles, particularly as the movies go on and he matures. He’s the man who escaped captivity and shut down his company’s legacy because he saw it being used for evil, and accepted full responsibility and culpability. He’s the man who spends the rest of his life trying to make amends for that bloody history, and all the mistakes that follow. But Tony Stark is also a visionary and a futurist, not content to simply wallow in the past and make amends for past deeds; instead, he focuses on the future, on determining what may happen and how his own hands can play a role, and attempting to avoid tragedy before it can even occur. Naturally, when combined with his guilt and fear and anxiety, this just leads to further tragedy. See: accidentally building a robot menace that nearly destroys the world, when he was just trying to protect it. Classic.

But Tony isn’t just a ball of fear and guilt and issues, though those things do provide the backdrop for many (maybe even most) of his actions. He’s a little shit, plain and simple, and intersperses many of his interactions with flippancy, quips, degrading nicknames, and sarcasm. He plays himself off as cavalier, dismissive, and arrogant, often to the exasperation of those around him. This is sometimes Tony making a production of how Just Fine he is, but other times it’s just Tony being himself.

He’s a genius in the most traditional sense, which ends up being his “superpower”, and despite his many insecurities, his ability on this front is something he’s unfailingly confident in. He can create almost anything he sets his mind to, even if that something is an element that his own AI says cannot be synthesized. He built himself a sustainable miniaturized power source (in a cave! with a box of scraps!) under extreme duress, with limited time and resources. And that’s not even mentioning the creation of the Iron Man suit, or the many (many) iterations that followed, each more advanced and impressive than the last.

He has perseverance in spades; he spends many of the movies under some kind of pain or duress (physical or mental), but never kicks up any kind of fuss about it or even admits to it most of the time, choosing instead to soldier on in silence. This is often a problem in and of itself (Tony Stark will never tell you if he’s dying or not; you’ll just have to figure it out), but it’s also the quality that allows him to keep picking himself up despite repeated hardship and trauma. After Afghanistan, after Stane’s betrayal, after nearly dying in Iron Man 2, after New York, after the events of Iron Man 3, after Ultron--he just keeps soldiering on despite the hardship, because that’s who and what he is. An iron man, you might say. (I’m sorry)

He’s also a generous philanthropist--generous in general, really--as he gives millions of dollars away to crowds of MIT students, supports charities, offers to fly Phil Coulson to Portland any time he wants to visit his cellist girlfriend, fully funds the Avengers’ operations and equipment, decks out the workshop of a child that took him in for a few days in Iron Man 3, etc. He doesn’t take his wealth for granted, and instead uses it to further his futurist ideals-- “reframing the future” for the better, as he puts it in Civil War.

This is just another indicator of the big heart he carries around with him, the same one that’s motivated by guilt and a desire to make amends. He’s a man who cares about things so strongly and holds so steadfast to his beliefs that he often manufactures his own problems and demons. So much of his time is spent attempting to correct past mistakes and make up for the guilt that hangs heavy on his conscience that it becomes his primary motivator and creates even more tragedy to befall him, like a vicious cycle. But that’s the classic story of Tony Stark: he tries REALLY hard, all the time. Sometimes that’s the problem.

Nonetheless, he’ll keep trying.


Abilities/Skills:
There’s a more detailed wiki entry here, but I’ll summarize according to my personal interpretation/discretion:


  • Mechanical engineering - he’s an expert with weapons manufacturing in particular (missiles with advanced computerized components, guns, land mines, you name it), but he’s also advanced enough to create the Iron Man suit’s many iterations and miniaturize Howard Stark’s arc reactor. He’s also great with cars, tractors, various sundry found at a RadioShack -- basically, if it’s a machine, he’ll probably coo softly at it before lovingly taking it apart and improving it. Him and machines have an understanding.
  • Computers & Programming - similar to the above, as he’s responsible for programming his house, his AIs, his phones and tablets, self-piloting jets and helicopters, etc etc etc. He even managed to suggest modifications to the Extremis program while drunk off his ass that one time.
  • AI - he’s able to design AI like JARVIS and FRIDAY that are practically people in their own right for how efficient and responsive they are to verbal commands and requests. (And he somehow even programmed JARVIS to be sarcastic). There’s also that time he accidentally created sentient life in Ultron, but... yeah. Anyway.
  • Mathematics - given all of the above, Tony can presumably do ridiculously complex mathematics in his head, in record time. To quote him, “[If] my math is right, and it always is.”
  • Hacking - he hacked the Pentagon on a dare in grade school, and his prowess has presumably only improved since then, given the times we’ve seen him hacking government computers at senate hearings, hacking SHIELD, de-encrypting nuclear codes, etc etc.
  • Intellect, in general - consider all of the above, his quips about becoming an expert in thermonuclear astrophysics in one night, his ability to analyze something like Loki’s sceptor and glean that there’s AI embedded inside it, and it’s clear that Tony’s real super power isn’t any one skill so much as his genius.



Strengths/Weaknesses:
He’s a shrewd businessman, hacker, computer programmer, AI designer, mechanical engineer, he created a new element after building a particle accelerator in his basement that one time--he doesn’t just do good work, he innovates, constantly pushing the limits of what can or cannot conceivably exist. Basically, hands-on work where he can use those skillsets is ideal for keeping him (and everyone around him) sane. His genius will bleed through into everything he does.

That said... he can be misguided despite his attempts to do the right thing, which means Accidentally Fucking Up A Lot, Like All The Time. He’s been accused of not working well on a team, he’s not particularly concerned with deferring to authority (hostile to the suggestion, actually) and his non-superficial communication skills could use some TLC, charisma and public speaking abilities aside. He also has almost no regard for his own physical or mental wellbeing, which can make him a liability, a chore, or a hazard, depending on the circumstances. Also, if we’re considering weaknesses in their most literal sense, he still has the shrapnel and arc reactor in his chest at this canon point, which is a huuuge physical vulnerability.



Items:
OKAY, I’m not sure how to classify the Iron Man suit here, or if it’s even kosher for him to bring that in. Assuming that it is, it would most likely be the Mark VII armor, which he would have been in the midst of repairing, given his canon point. He’d also have the two tracking bracelets that go along with it. It wouldn’t be in top working condition, given the fallout from New York.

He'd also be wearing the clothes on his back, most likely a pair of dark jeans and some kind of band tshirt out of RDJ's closet.



SAMPLES
Network Sample:
[ When the video blinks to life, Tony Stark is leaning back in his chair, projecting perfect chill with everything going on around him, despite “everything” including kidnappings into goddamn space. It’s convincing, because the MID can’t pick up the way his leg is bouncing anxiously. Expertly done. ]

So, [ he begins, without much in the way of preamble ] if a guy were looking for - hypothetically - a screw driver, a miniaturized soldering iron, a clamp, various electrical components, and other assorted stocking stuffers, where might he find those? Asking for a friend. Roomba’s on the fritz, you know how that goes.

[ Are there roombas in space? He’ll be pretty disappointed if there aren’t, but that’s - he’s digressing. They say these bracelets can’t be taken off or taken apart, which sounds like a challenge aimed at him specifically, so challenge accepted, thank you. ]

Let me know. You know where to find me.

[ The directory hasn’t escaped his notice, after all. He offers a self-satisfied smirk that he isn’t exactly feeling, and cuts the feed. ]

Prose/Action Sample: Marvel meets DC in inter-dimensional hijinx