Name: Chris Irwin
Age: 18
Grade: 12
Gender: Male
Stereotype: Artistic, Nerd
Hometown: Doncaster, UK
Appearance: Short dark brown, almost black hair, always covered by a beanie. Dresses very nicely with button up shirts and dark jeans, sometimes a colored tie is included in his ensemble on occasion. Freckles cover his nose and cheeks. Wears his black Ray Ban glasses every day.
Personality: Chris is a very intelligent and interesting guy, also very mature for his age. Always greets people with a smile, and an especially big smile when he is with his girlfriend Alice. He can be perverted and weird like any teenage boy, but never in school or around his girlfriend. Chris has a heart of gold and he cares a lot about how he will be remembered as a person in life.
Involvement in School: Yearbook, AV crew for "Capitol TV"
Hobbies: Cooking, baking, studying, playing tennis with Alice (and almost always losing to her).
Strengths: Very smart, fast swimmer, look weak, but he's actually very strong. Not much gets to him anymore, he's a tough person.
Weaknesses: Although he doesn't admit it, his girlfriend Alice is his biggest weakness (when she's hurt or sad or in distress it breaks him). Hates the dark, hates isolation. He snaps when someone brings up his mother, but is learning to control the anger.
Brief Backstory: Chris always had a good life, until he turned 13. His mom died in a car accident (she was hit by a drunk driver), and his dad still won't forgive himself for letting her go to the store alone that night. Chris hides the pain with his smile, which is slowly becoming less and less forced thanks to Alice. He met her on their first day of grade 10. He instantly fell for her the moment he saw her. She was the first person to make him smile a real smile in years.
Token: A locket with a picture of him and his mother inside it that he was given a few Christmases ago.
YOU ARE READING
Writer Games: Bleeps and Geeks (FULL)
Teen FictionPrincipal Thorne needs obedience in a boarding school that has little to offer in the way of behaving. Her solution; give her students their own present-day Hunger games, and see how they feel knowing 30 of their peers will be fighting to the death...