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satanicpanics) wrote2025-05-31 12:39 am
DIADEM; app
Player Information
Player: Hannah (2)
Contact:
Invitation OR characters played: Dee invited me awhile back!
Are you over 18?: Yes
Character Information
Character: Eddie Munson
Canon: Stranger Things; after his Cool Guitar Solo but before his Tragic Death
Age: About 20
History: Link
Possessions: The clothes off his back, a lighter, and if acceptable, his electric guitar.
Weapon: He won't arrive with one, but he'll likely find a knife or a switchblade somewhere.
Powers/Abilities: No fancy powers or abilities! Heās just aa normal guy with some above average musical skill, some skill with cars, and the ability to run away from any situation.
Application Questions
Who is the most important person in their life and why? What might be different if this person hadn't been around?
Okay so stick with me here. We donāt get to see Eddie interact with his uncle Wayne on screen at all. Not even once. Itās one of the banes of my existence and Iāll never forgive the show for it. That being saidā¦Iām still going to have to go with Wayne.
Pulling in a bit of canon from the tie-in book here, Eddieās mother died when he was young and his father essentially took offāhe works illegal schemes across the country and been known to show up every so often when heās not in jail, but heās essentially absent from Eddieās life, enough so that Wayne stepped in. For all intents and purposes, Wayne is Eddieās parent and Eddie is only as well adjusted as he is because of Wayne.
Wayne is a single man who lives in a trailer and works a low income job (Eddie feels guilty about the amount of money he soaks up and the tie-in book implies he begins selling drugs to take some of the financial stress off of his uncle), but he cares about his nephew deeply to the point of giving him the single bedroom in the trailer and sleeping on a cot in the living room himself. He doesnāt care that his nephew has long hair and tattoos because he knows who his Eddie truly is in spite of those things: kind and caring without a truly cruel bone in his body. When he comes home from a graveyard shift and finds a girl dead in his trailer and Eddie is nowhere to be seen, Wayne knows from the start that his nephew is innocent. He never questions it, even though everyone surrounding him views it as an open and shut case.
āMy nephew, he may look dangerous, but he didnāt do this. It just aināt in his nature. No matter what anyone says, and they will say things, this wasnāt Eddie.ā
Again, we donāt get to see much of it, itās easy to assume that Eddie would be nowhere with his uncleāexcept maybe jail. Even before Chrissy Cunninghamās death, he really had no one else on his side. Heās always been the local freak, viewed as dangerous or a troublemaker and eventually, a satanic cultist. The only adult on his side to the very end is his uncle.
Is there an event in your character's life that they'd do differently? How so and why?
If he could, heād redo the whole thing with Chrissy Cunningham. She dies in his uncleās trailer via the showās then-unseen Big Bad called Vecna, Eddie grows frantic and scared and runs, leaving her there.
Her death wasnāt his fault and he knows that. She was already a target of Vecna and Eddieās presence didnāt factor into it; it was simply just a perfect storm of him being in the wrong place with the wrong person at the wrong time, but he still harbors a lot of guilt over the situation. He was the only other person there, the only person who could have even tried to help her, and he ran away. This kind of acted as the catalyst for everythingāEddieās fear, Eddie being wanted for murder, Eddie on the run.
If he could go back, he would have stayed with her. Itās unlikely that he could actually do anything to combat Vecna on his own or to convince the police he was innocent, but he knows that she deserved better than to be abandoned, and his uncle deserved an explanation.
What's the greatest challenge you foresee your character facing in the setting?
His own general fear, anxiety, and cowardice. One can assume that in his everyday life, Eddie isnāt always jumping at shadows and sounds. Season four exists mainly as a snapshot of him at an especially heightened level of anxiety thatās well above the baseline, and understandable so. He just watched a girl die, heās wanted for her murder, and heās just discovered that his small town is far more cursed than he initially thought. Heās got a lot going on!
But despite all this, itās clear that heās kind of hard-wired to become that frantic, anxious person under the right circumstances. In his natural state, heās high-strung (āheās always revved upā, according to Mike Wheeler) and easily set off. Heās pretty quick to label himself as a coward, like he views himself that way even outside of his situation in season four.
No one is harder on Eddie for this than Eddie himself, though, and heās shown that he can hold his own. Heās constantly and overwhelmingly helpful to the rest of the group throughout the season. Itās Eddie who points the rest of the toward the War Zone, an army/navy surplus store where they can buy weapons to help defeat the seasonās big bad. When they require the use of a vehicle, itās also Eddie who hot-wires an RV for them. Itās Eddie whose morse code gets the attention of Dustin, Lucas and Erica through the lights, and Eddie and his guitar who act as a distraction for the demobats.Ā Heās overcome his fear before, and he can overcome it again and again.
What's the easiest thing you foresee your character adapting to in the setting?
It may sound like Iām contradicting the above, but I see him quickly adapting to the strange and the unusual and taking it all in stride. Despite his anxiety, Eddie comes from a world where he has recently become very well acquainted with the supernatural. Heās experienced whatever he hell Vecna is, alternate dimensions, mutant monstersāand all in the span of a week! It freaks him out, but by the end, heās facing it with a very āhere we go againā type of attitude. Scared, but not shocked. He never rejects what heās seeing and accepts it as the new normal very quickly. Heās no longer even questioning things by the time heās in the Upside Down. So being saddled with a loan in a weird city with cosmic storms? Yeah, makes sense.
Heāll also thrive with the concept of loose laws. Eddie isnāt half as much of a troublemaker as the people of Hawkins make him out to be, but heās still not exactly the shining example of an upstanding citizen. He never does it for the fun of it, but his morals are flexible and he does what he can to survive, even if it means dipping into the illegal: he sells drugs to make money, he puts his hot-wiring skills to use when his group needs a vehicle. Heāll find it nice to not automatically be a target because of his interests or what he looks like, whether heās doing illegal things or not.
Most of all, I suspect heāll be easily adapt socially with his fellow fluxdrifts. Eddie is genuinely good with people, especially the type of person who doesnāt ābelongā. Eddie hate conformity and believes in just being himself, and he has a certain knack for collecting the fellow freaks, black sheep and outsiders of the world and shepherding them into a place they feel as if they can belong. Back home, that was Hellfire Club. Here, heās likely to be able to replicate that in some way.
Samples
Sample: on the tdm
and an extra
