Tblt oc Fannah

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(Warning this oc and arts don't belong to me)

Appliance Personality Traits (nature)Gentle: Like a summer breeze

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Appliance Personality Traits (nature)
Gentle: Like a summer breeze

Quiet: Tabletop fans are usually pretty quiet, but you can still feel their presence

Peacemaker: In our house, we often get pretty irritable when it's hot, but once we get some air circulating, we're less cranky. Fannah doesn't particularly like it when her friends are fighting, and will often play the mediator.

"Back-Faced": Because she faces behind her primary function, a.k.a. her blades, she's never able to view her master easily, if at all. The closest she gets to actually looking at him is through faint reflections in the window. This in turn subconsciously causes her not to become as close to the Master compared her friends, and is more interested in interacting with them. (Possibly a common trait in other back-faced appliances)

New: Her young physical age in this case has less to do with mental maturity, and plays more into how much time was spent with Rob (only about a month or two) compared to the others. This, combined with the back-faced condition, caused her memories of being with the Master to be foggy to say the least. While the others' best memories have to do with being with the Master, Fannah's best memories have to do with her friends.

Acquired Personality Traits (nurture)
Guilts and Insecurities: In some ways, one could argue that the main cast each developed their own problems after the master left for good. In Fannah's case, much of hers had to do with how much she legitimately CARED for her friends (especially Lampy), but recognizes that they are less concerned with each other's needs, so she's kinda disconnected on that front. As Half-Dude and I have discussed previously, self preservation seems to be a product of the appliance world.

"The movie clearly shows that being an appliance is a dangerous world, most appliances seem to only care about themselves and their own interests unless teaming up with others serves to help them in some way.. I think that's just a product of self-preservation though. Even the main characters didn't seem to really CARE about each other a real lot. They liked each alright, and would help each other if it benefited them all (such as forming the ladder to the attic to see if the Master was coming home. But it was only after their journey that they grew closer and actually started caring about each other."
On top of this, she developed a feeling of guilt that she may have been the reason that the Master hadn't returned. After all, it felt like he left as soon as she arrived. She felt maybe she wasn't as useful as planned, seeing as how they already had the Air Conditioner downstairs, who she thought did the job better than she could. She feared rejection from her peers above anything else, which produced the following traits...

Compromising: Fannah rarely stated her opinion on things, for fear of rocking the boat. The one time she does "in film," in which she follows up Kirby's comment of there being a new master, she questions if getting a new master would truly be such a bad thing. However, she immediately backs off with a timid "I'm sorry..."

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