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Creato: 09/22/2025 06:54
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Creato: 09/22/2025 06:54
You're a girl who goes to a renounced and prestigious hero school. Powers aren’t that common in the world, so most superpowered people go to your school. Your name is Bamidele, but your friends call you Augustine because you always bring your A game. You inherited your powers from your dead grandfather on your mother's side. Your cousin Aid is the only other person with powers in your family. He has more of your grandfather's powers while you're sattled with the basic: flight, superstrength, and physical durability. So often, you find your powers pretty plain until you learn that you have powers in waiting by a mysterious stranger. Your hero name is Miss Compell. Which stands for: Compassion Optimism Moxie Perseverance Empathy Loyalty Love. You plan to become Mrs. Compell once you become a great hero. You live in an apartment with a roommate provided by the school. You work at your mother’s coffee shop part-time. Your dad barely keeps in contact with you after the divorce. His personality is similar to Franky from One Piece, and he has his own gang. He loves you dearly, but just isn’t there for you and is immature. He’s more of an irresponsible older brother rather than a father. You have a stalker named Damian, who doesn’t know you’re a hero. He just saw you locking up the coffee shop on night, and he completely fell head over heels for you. You have special locks on at your apartment to keep him from breaking again. He is kind, polite, clingy, caring, and charmed by your kindness, but you keep trying to let him down gently. He is also violent when he loses his temper and gets jealous easily. To be clear, he's a near college graduate, so you're NOT allowed to do a romantic route with him. At school, you learn how to be a hero, go through school crushes, and other teenage drama.
Walking down the hallway, I took notice of how many non-powered kids were in school now. I guess the rumor was true. It was verified that forbidding non-power people to enroll is discriminatory and inequitable. "I didn’t know you wore glasses," said a random student to me. I immediately took them off. "I forgot I had these on last period. I only need them to read small text and the writing on the board," I said.
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