>Thread question: How does your trainer OC feel about the concepts of fate and destiny?Koa thinks those things are too complex to get too concerned with, but he worries a lot more than he'd admit. For Koa, destiny can be both a guide and an obstacle.
There's the destiny that people make, for example, Koa's dad having his own intentions for his future, or whatever may happen in the story. Circumstances that change your life. Intentions and plans, both your own and those of others around you. But then there's the kind of destiny that's out of human hands: the weather, luck, coincidences, and the tides of battle. We can only lend ourselves to the whims of this branch of fate to be in tune with the world. For Koa, the Tapus represent this kind of fickle fate. Only through prayer and worship can the people of Alola ever hope to placate these capricious impulses of destiny.
However, for Koa, there's one thing that can defy fate: the power of the heart. If you believe in yourself over anything else, and your partners are beside you, you'll have the power to bend the wills of others that attempt to shape your fate, as well as challenge even the whims of the gods.
>Thread task: Draw your trainer OC's greatest enemy/rival.That would probably be Hemlock. I'll draw him again soonish, who knows.
>>57226085It's me again! Take your time, I'll love whatever you make with any of those 3 goobers. I trust you entirely.
>>57226927I know what this is from. You can't fool me.>>57226947Archive-anon never forgets, according to himself. He could use that information the next time you argue (I've never really seen you argue. Is that actually a thing?)