Re/Alignment Application 2
Jul. 18th, 2013 11:46 pmPlayer Information
*Name/Alias: Jayde
*Your Journal:
mordoriannazgul
*Age: 26
*Email/Plurk/AIM/etc: e-mail: Jaydepuff@aol.com; aim: Jaydepuff; plurk: Greywolf360
*Characters already in the game: Fracas (OCC), Barricade (CRAU), Swoop (Canon), Strelok (Canon/The Lost)
Character Information
*Character Name: Noisy Boy
*Character Canon: Real Steel
*Age: Roughly 2-4 years old… not that he acts it.
*Race: Robot Boxer
*Timeline/Pull Point: About halfway through the movie, during Atom’s win montage, while Charlie is repairing (and presumably restores) Noisy Boy
*History: Little is known about Noisy Boy’s beginning. He was built in Japan by Tak Mashido, the creator of the current World Robot Boxing champion Zeus, for a tidy sum of money (to the tune of $13.1 million, according to the stats listed on his Second Screen entry). In his day he was a bruiser, and has a (current) record of 15-2. His first loss was for the WRB Championship Belt in 2016 against a bot named Rubicon. The pair went three rounds, and Noisy might have taken it if Rubicon hadn’t gotten in a lucky hit that knocked the Steel Samurai out.
Following that loss, Tak Mashido sold him in 2017, and Noisy Boy left America on an “exile tour” to other countries and cities. Notable places mentioned in the movie that he presumably fought at are London, Japan, and Brazil with the city Sao Paulo mentioned in specific. Korea and Switzerland are also mentioned, if only on the labels for his shipping crate. Selling him also made the blueprints his then-revolutionary voice command system available on the market; the system especially took off in Brazil, which Charlie (incorrectly) assumed was the country Noisy Boy had gained his headset rig in.
Noisy Boy was later bought by one Charlie Kenton in a black market deal for a rather paltry $45,000, finally making his return to America two years after his defeat by Rubicon. Of course, at that price, it wasn’t the most triumphant return. Charlie, his son Max, and his occasional girlfriend Bailey had to do some tweaking to do when Noisy arrived, since his voice command had several language settings on it (English and Japanese and most likely Portuguese, given the countries listed on his shipping container)… and he responded to commands spoken in Japanese.
Noisy’s return became much less triumphant when he was entered in an Underground boxing match at Crash Palace with its reigning champion, Midas. As with his fight with Rubicon, he should have been able to win the match… but Charlie was unfamiliar with his controls and combos and got cocky when Noisy scored a few hits on Midas; part of the problem came down to Charlie going for flashy moves with really cool names. Coupled with his lack ability to perform illegal moves like Midas, Noisy lost an arm, his head… and whatever dignity he might have had. Charlie sold his head to the proprietor of Crash Palace for petty cash.
Noisy Boy, once a champion robot, was left consigned to the trash heap. However, as Charlie and Max’s new bot Atom started climbing the ranks from the Underground, there was suddenly hope; Noisy Boy was last seen in the film being rebuilt by Charlie in the background.
*Personality: Real Steel is extremely vague about the level of sentience that is given to boxing robots. However, given that they were designed for the movie with ‘personalities’ and at least three (Atom, Zeus, Ambush) show some amount of autonomy at some point, it is not a stretch to assume they are independently intelligent in their own right.
Noisy Boy – both in-universe and out of it – was designed to be a shogun warrior, and he acts it. He’s an even-keel sort of bot that follows the rules to the letter and tends to expect the same from those he meets and fights against. In spite of his name he’s generally a quiet sort, choosing not to speak unless necessary. He much prefers observing and analyzing the area… and is something of a people-watcher in the movie, spending several of his scenes looking at whatever humans happen to be in the area. Outside of fights he’s generally respectful, though not necessarily the friendliest sort. He has a tendency for being aloof unless he happens to know someone already or warms up to them.
More than anything, he has some kind of faith in his operators/handlers. He has switched hands several times and has come to have faith that, no matter how bad the fights get, his handler will bring him back out safely. Which he has, admittedly, been forced to amend in part recently. Still, he assumes that whoever his handler happens to be will do their best to make things okay later. Without that assurance he will have to find a way to rely on himself alone, or those around him.
Unfortunately, fighting and observation are more or less the extent of his interests. He doesn’t understand most of art, music, film, and literature and has no creative ability of his own. He has little concept of science or even his own engineering since it is rarely explained in front of him while he’s online. In spite of this he’s still one of the more worldly bots seen in the film; he has travelled for two years and been able to see more than other WRB bots might. One of the few things he could be said to enjoy is stargazing; the fights mostly occur at night, and it did not take long for him to notice that the lights in sky were different in different places on his exile tour. He’s taken to making note of the differences where he goes as a reference for himself, much as he notes the differences in other bots or in humans from different places.
*Powers/Abilities: Noisy Boy has few skills outside of his boxing prowess. That said he is an extremely competent boxer and a capable opponent in the ring; he doesn’t have fifteen wins under his belt for nothing. On the Real Steel Wiki’s List of Bot Types, he is generally classified as a Lightning Bruiser. Essentially he is a well-rounded fighter with decent speed and tough enough armor to take some hits while still dishing it out. His fighting style is generally fast and fluid. That said, he can still make mistakes in fights and can still be taken apart by strong enough blows, particularly to his joints and where his armor allows for movement. As well, being designed specifically for World Robot Boxing League matches, he cannot perform and has difficulty countering illegal fight moves: pretty much anything that isn’t punching above the waist.
Noisy’s real combat strength lies in his combos. He has been programmed with an outrageous number of fight combos, from the three-punch Shogun Trinity to the fist-spinning finisher called the Southpaw Pain Revolution, to typical jabs and uppercuts. In addition, he can be programmed with additional combos by his handler. Instructions for using them can be delivered as quickly as saying a word to Noisy thanks to his voice recognition software. The only particular issue with his combos is that his handler must know the name given to the combo, or Noisy Boy cannot execute it… and most of the combos have names exactly as ridiculous as Shogun Trinity and Southpaw Pain Revolution. Unfortunately for his fight with Midas, this results in a lot of Noisy Boy standing and getting beaten while Charlie shouts instructions to no avail.
Noisy Boy’s hands and forearms deserve a special mention for what they are. He was not built with physical hands and rather has a permanent fist with false thumb jointing that is permanently attached to his wrist and forearm. His forearm has a spinning mechanism that, when spun up, can deliver more force to his blows… but being out of the context of a fight, his lack of digits could prove a detriment. And unless he somehow figures out how to use his own voice recognition, he might have difficulty fighting without a handler.
An additional consideration is how Noisy Boy is powered. Boxing robots from his world typically recharge by being connected to what amounts to an electrical plug. Without that that plug-in he will steadily begin to lose charge, and will lose more of that charge if he needs to fight. Luckily he can continue running for a while after running out of his reserve charge, though eventually he will shut down.
*Inventory: Just himself, and his audio command headset, which has been around his neck this whole time. I’m assuming that he left his glass diagnostic screen in his room in Vector’s temple since he couldn’t really carry it.
*Starting Polarity: Tentatively saying Vector Prime once again
Writing Samples
*First Person Sample: [The video comes on for a brief moment, showing a helmet that looks rather similar to a shogun warrior’s, in purple with yellow accents and bright yellow optics. His chin tilts down slightly, the sound of pistons whirring off-screen. Eventually the image cuts off in favor of text.]
I hope this message gets through. I am Noisy Boy. I do not know how many of you might recall me, but I have been in the Haven previously, and I have some inquiries to make. First, I am looking for a bot named Midas. He is eight-foot-two inches, with gold plating and a red fiberoptic Mohawk. He is extremely abrasive and uses text like I do, so he will likely be easy to pick out.
My second inquiry is a request to speak to anyone with experience in either programming or upgrading. I will require alterations if I am to survive on this planet.
[There’s a pause for maybe half a minute in the transmission, before Noisy Boy finally adds-] How long have I been absent?
*Third Person Sample: He hadn’t seen the right coming until he was already on the mat.
He wasn’t sure how it happened, when he thought back on it later. Tak should have seen it, right? Even if Noisy hadn’t. They should have been able to counter. He should have noticed and sent the information to his diagnostics so Tak would know he needed to counter. Everything had been going so well up until that point. Not that it mattered afterwards. Not even the moment after, where he was laying on the mat, left optic guttering and his helmet crumpled from the blow. Tak was sending the signals to get up, get up, and Noisy Boy would have obeyed if he could have. His limbs just refused to move.
They had to call in a rig to carry him out of the ring. Rubicon walked away a champion.
He learned some hard lessons that day, and in the days to come. The way that his creator would turn him on only to stare at him, eyes hard. It was such an unfamiliar look that it took Noisy Boy a while to realize it was angry disappointment, which made him even more ashamed of his loss. He learned that failure was a terrible thing… though sometimes it happened, even on accident. Sometimes you didn’t see the punch coming. It took being out of Tak’s care for two years before he could truly accept that fact. It also allowed him to realize that loss can be fleeting, too – even with his failure, the crowds still loved him, and that was more important than the outcome of the fight to him. Though he still preferred successes to the alternative.
Success could be just as fleeting, as he found out thanks to Rubicon’s short-lived title and his all-too-swift vanishing from the WRB itself… and Tak moving on to create a winning bot. He supposed that was what he’d wanted to begin with; the recognition of his creation being superior to all the rest. Noisy Boy was happy for him, and was in part glad that it was not him. He would not have come to understand so much if Tak Mashido hadn’t given up on him.
How different things might have been, if he had seen that right coming.
Final Notes: I would like to bring him back with his memories of Re/Alignment still intact, if possible.
*Name/Alias: Jayde
*Your Journal:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
*Age: 26
*Email/Plurk/AIM/etc: e-mail: Jaydepuff@aol.com; aim: Jaydepuff; plurk: Greywolf360
*Characters already in the game: Fracas (OCC), Barricade (CRAU), Swoop (Canon), Strelok (Canon/The Lost)
Character Information
*Character Name: Noisy Boy
*Character Canon: Real Steel
*Age: Roughly 2-4 years old… not that he acts it.
*Race: Robot Boxer
*Timeline/Pull Point: About halfway through the movie, during Atom’s win montage, while Charlie is repairing (and presumably restores) Noisy Boy
*History: Little is known about Noisy Boy’s beginning. He was built in Japan by Tak Mashido, the creator of the current World Robot Boxing champion Zeus, for a tidy sum of money (to the tune of $13.1 million, according to the stats listed on his Second Screen entry). In his day he was a bruiser, and has a (current) record of 15-2. His first loss was for the WRB Championship Belt in 2016 against a bot named Rubicon. The pair went three rounds, and Noisy might have taken it if Rubicon hadn’t gotten in a lucky hit that knocked the Steel Samurai out.
Following that loss, Tak Mashido sold him in 2017, and Noisy Boy left America on an “exile tour” to other countries and cities. Notable places mentioned in the movie that he presumably fought at are London, Japan, and Brazil with the city Sao Paulo mentioned in specific. Korea and Switzerland are also mentioned, if only on the labels for his shipping crate. Selling him also made the blueprints his then-revolutionary voice command system available on the market; the system especially took off in Brazil, which Charlie (incorrectly) assumed was the country Noisy Boy had gained his headset rig in.
Noisy Boy was later bought by one Charlie Kenton in a black market deal for a rather paltry $45,000, finally making his return to America two years after his defeat by Rubicon. Of course, at that price, it wasn’t the most triumphant return. Charlie, his son Max, and his occasional girlfriend Bailey had to do some tweaking to do when Noisy arrived, since his voice command had several language settings on it (English and Japanese and most likely Portuguese, given the countries listed on his shipping container)… and he responded to commands spoken in Japanese.
Noisy’s return became much less triumphant when he was entered in an Underground boxing match at Crash Palace with its reigning champion, Midas. As with his fight with Rubicon, he should have been able to win the match… but Charlie was unfamiliar with his controls and combos and got cocky when Noisy scored a few hits on Midas; part of the problem came down to Charlie going for flashy moves with really cool names. Coupled with his lack ability to perform illegal moves like Midas, Noisy lost an arm, his head… and whatever dignity he might have had. Charlie sold his head to the proprietor of Crash Palace for petty cash.
Noisy Boy, once a champion robot, was left consigned to the trash heap. However, as Charlie and Max’s new bot Atom started climbing the ranks from the Underground, there was suddenly hope; Noisy Boy was last seen in the film being rebuilt by Charlie in the background.
*Personality: Real Steel is extremely vague about the level of sentience that is given to boxing robots. However, given that they were designed for the movie with ‘personalities’ and at least three (Atom, Zeus, Ambush) show some amount of autonomy at some point, it is not a stretch to assume they are independently intelligent in their own right.
Noisy Boy – both in-universe and out of it – was designed to be a shogun warrior, and he acts it. He’s an even-keel sort of bot that follows the rules to the letter and tends to expect the same from those he meets and fights against. In spite of his name he’s generally a quiet sort, choosing not to speak unless necessary. He much prefers observing and analyzing the area… and is something of a people-watcher in the movie, spending several of his scenes looking at whatever humans happen to be in the area. Outside of fights he’s generally respectful, though not necessarily the friendliest sort. He has a tendency for being aloof unless he happens to know someone already or warms up to them.
More than anything, he has some kind of faith in his operators/handlers. He has switched hands several times and has come to have faith that, no matter how bad the fights get, his handler will bring him back out safely. Which he has, admittedly, been forced to amend in part recently. Still, he assumes that whoever his handler happens to be will do their best to make things okay later. Without that assurance he will have to find a way to rely on himself alone, or those around him.
Unfortunately, fighting and observation are more or less the extent of his interests. He doesn’t understand most of art, music, film, and literature and has no creative ability of his own. He has little concept of science or even his own engineering since it is rarely explained in front of him while he’s online. In spite of this he’s still one of the more worldly bots seen in the film; he has travelled for two years and been able to see more than other WRB bots might. One of the few things he could be said to enjoy is stargazing; the fights mostly occur at night, and it did not take long for him to notice that the lights in sky were different in different places on his exile tour. He’s taken to making note of the differences where he goes as a reference for himself, much as he notes the differences in other bots or in humans from different places.
*Powers/Abilities: Noisy Boy has few skills outside of his boxing prowess. That said he is an extremely competent boxer and a capable opponent in the ring; he doesn’t have fifteen wins under his belt for nothing. On the Real Steel Wiki’s List of Bot Types, he is generally classified as a Lightning Bruiser. Essentially he is a well-rounded fighter with decent speed and tough enough armor to take some hits while still dishing it out. His fighting style is generally fast and fluid. That said, he can still make mistakes in fights and can still be taken apart by strong enough blows, particularly to his joints and where his armor allows for movement. As well, being designed specifically for World Robot Boxing League matches, he cannot perform and has difficulty countering illegal fight moves: pretty much anything that isn’t punching above the waist.
Noisy’s real combat strength lies in his combos. He has been programmed with an outrageous number of fight combos, from the three-punch Shogun Trinity to the fist-spinning finisher called the Southpaw Pain Revolution, to typical jabs and uppercuts. In addition, he can be programmed with additional combos by his handler. Instructions for using them can be delivered as quickly as saying a word to Noisy thanks to his voice recognition software. The only particular issue with his combos is that his handler must know the name given to the combo, or Noisy Boy cannot execute it… and most of the combos have names exactly as ridiculous as Shogun Trinity and Southpaw Pain Revolution. Unfortunately for his fight with Midas, this results in a lot of Noisy Boy standing and getting beaten while Charlie shouts instructions to no avail.
Noisy Boy’s hands and forearms deserve a special mention for what they are. He was not built with physical hands and rather has a permanent fist with false thumb jointing that is permanently attached to his wrist and forearm. His forearm has a spinning mechanism that, when spun up, can deliver more force to his blows… but being out of the context of a fight, his lack of digits could prove a detriment. And unless he somehow figures out how to use his own voice recognition, he might have difficulty fighting without a handler.
An additional consideration is how Noisy Boy is powered. Boxing robots from his world typically recharge by being connected to what amounts to an electrical plug. Without that that plug-in he will steadily begin to lose charge, and will lose more of that charge if he needs to fight. Luckily he can continue running for a while after running out of his reserve charge, though eventually he will shut down.
*Inventory: Just himself, and his audio command headset, which has been around his neck this whole time. I’m assuming that he left his glass diagnostic screen in his room in Vector’s temple since he couldn’t really carry it.
*Starting Polarity: Tentatively saying Vector Prime once again
Writing Samples
*First Person Sample: [The video comes on for a brief moment, showing a helmet that looks rather similar to a shogun warrior’s, in purple with yellow accents and bright yellow optics. His chin tilts down slightly, the sound of pistons whirring off-screen. Eventually the image cuts off in favor of text.]
I hope this message gets through. I am Noisy Boy. I do not know how many of you might recall me, but I have been in the Haven previously, and I have some inquiries to make. First, I am looking for a bot named Midas. He is eight-foot-two inches, with gold plating and a red fiberoptic Mohawk. He is extremely abrasive and uses text like I do, so he will likely be easy to pick out.
My second inquiry is a request to speak to anyone with experience in either programming or upgrading. I will require alterations if I am to survive on this planet.
[There’s a pause for maybe half a minute in the transmission, before Noisy Boy finally adds-] How long have I been absent?
*Third Person Sample: He hadn’t seen the right coming until he was already on the mat.
He wasn’t sure how it happened, when he thought back on it later. Tak should have seen it, right? Even if Noisy hadn’t. They should have been able to counter. He should have noticed and sent the information to his diagnostics so Tak would know he needed to counter. Everything had been going so well up until that point. Not that it mattered afterwards. Not even the moment after, where he was laying on the mat, left optic guttering and his helmet crumpled from the blow. Tak was sending the signals to get up, get up, and Noisy Boy would have obeyed if he could have. His limbs just refused to move.
They had to call in a rig to carry him out of the ring. Rubicon walked away a champion.
He learned some hard lessons that day, and in the days to come. The way that his creator would turn him on only to stare at him, eyes hard. It was such an unfamiliar look that it took Noisy Boy a while to realize it was angry disappointment, which made him even more ashamed of his loss. He learned that failure was a terrible thing… though sometimes it happened, even on accident. Sometimes you didn’t see the punch coming. It took being out of Tak’s care for two years before he could truly accept that fact. It also allowed him to realize that loss can be fleeting, too – even with his failure, the crowds still loved him, and that was more important than the outcome of the fight to him. Though he still preferred successes to the alternative.
Success could be just as fleeting, as he found out thanks to Rubicon’s short-lived title and his all-too-swift vanishing from the WRB itself… and Tak moving on to create a winning bot. He supposed that was what he’d wanted to begin with; the recognition of his creation being superior to all the rest. Noisy Boy was happy for him, and was in part glad that it was not him. He would not have come to understand so much if Tak Mashido hadn’t given up on him.
How different things might have been, if he had seen that right coming.
Final Notes: I would like to bring him back with his memories of Re/Alignment still intact, if possible.