
My first character from the TMNT RPG way back in 1988. His name is Manhattan, he stands about 4' 6". He was created accidentally and escaped from the lab before the mutations took hold. He was taught how to talk and fight by a blind japanese hermit he met when he moved into a junkyard. The hermit died after a few years and left manhattan on his own to study and fend for himself. He equipped himself with a bulletproof vest he found on a cop that had been shot in the head. It diudn't seem like the cop would be needing it.
He often teamed up with a white, rich mutant labrat, named Davis, which usually ended up with manhattan getting his ass kicked. He was tough but lacked a motorized conveyance with which to escape from overwhelming numbers. Davis, being a rich bungler, usually made a lot of noise and attracted a lot of attention and then ran when the trouble got a little hairy.
He often teamed up with a white, rich mutant labrat, named Davis, which usually ended up with manhattan getting his ass kicked. He was tough but lacked a motorized conveyance with which to escape from overwhelming numbers. Davis, being a rich bungler, usually made a lot of noise and attracted a lot of attention and then ran when the trouble got a little hairy.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / General Furry Art
Species Housecat
Size 345 x 550px
File Size 20.9 kB
Indeed. Also, I made him up when I was 15 or 16 and needed an explanation why a runaway from a genetics experiment run by the US government would know ninjutsu.
Blind Japanes hermit living in a junkyard seemed to make sense. Had they offered Shao Lin Gung Fu, it woulda been Blind Master Po, himself, or possibly Kwai Chang Kane, blinded and living in an unhealthy exile due to his massive wanderings and squandering of his lessons.
Blind Japanes hermit living in a junkyard seemed to make sense. Had they offered Shao Lin Gung Fu, it woulda been Blind Master Po, himself, or possibly Kwai Chang Kane, blinded and living in an unhealthy exile due to his massive wanderings and squandering of his lessons.
Comments