Thread:DatAsymptote/@comment-25236008-20140219043322/@comment-25236008-20140219101620

Hmm, you do have a point. I really like your suggestion about making the happy prince's daughter naive. I was thinking she'd be very sensible and wants others to give a little away for a bit of appreciation in return but this makes her very harsh when criticizing people who don't follow that statement. For example, she criticizes a lot about Apple's behavior on Legacy Day and for not giving up a planned destiny for Raven. Well, if she actually gave it up, that means she won't have to marry someone she does not love and it would probably be more interesting if you don't know what is gonna happen to you. About the giant's daughter, I haven't thought of a special talent yet. Maybe she's good at tending plants or maybe...dancing? And she wants to prove the rumor that giants cannot dance is wrong. Also, there's an irrevelant topic I want to discuss with you. I don't know if this is a headcannon but: I think Headmaster Grimm represents the original writers and those who want to protect the original works, while the Rebels represent adaptions of those tales. Each generation represents a time in which the tales were told or rewritten. Headmaster Grimm wanted the stories to stay as they were written, so he made up the whole "don't sign the book, gone from existence" thing. (By the way, I think Cerise Hood is the daughter of Red Riding Hood from either the Charles Perrault version (the wolf was a sexual predator) or the movie and horror novel version (RRH was dating the wolf, who pretends to be some charming dude)).