PLAYER Name: Orlando Age: 24 Personal Journal:paperback E-mail: agreylady@gmail.com AIM/MSN/etc: Elspeth Vimes
CHARACTER Name: Masamori Sumimura Canon:Kekkaishi Age: 21 (possibly 22 by this point in canon, it's unclear) Timeline: Mid-chapter 318 (after leaving Yomi) If playing another character from the same canon, how will you deal with this?: n/a
Personality: On the surface, Masamori is everything you could want in an older brother figure. He's friendly and easygoing, frequently seen with a smile on his face. He takes an interest in people, in their interests, and in how they're doing both individually and in relation to others. He's observant, and tries to give people appropriate attention. He can be teasing, but it's good-natured teasing, and only to people he knows can handle it. He's encouraging, recognizing potential strengths and trying to foster them. He frequently give people second and third chances, believing that they will pay off (and often, it does), and even if it doesn't quite work as planned valuable lessons will be gained. He is apparently very forgiving. He frequently doesn't punish people for mistakes and moves past some betrayals.
He's been accused of being "soft," on account of his willingness to let mistakes go and even to accept known traitors back into the fold for a second chance. Masamori is not soft. People fall into three categories with him. There the people who are "his," his family or the family he has made with the Yagyou. He cares about these people and will protect them in any way he can. There are the people he can use, the ones he doesn't trust but knows he can manipulate or benefit from. And then there are his enemies, the ones who threaten or harm "his" people without having something to offer him. Masamori doesn't really make enemies lightly. But when he does, he is out to destroy them completely.
Masamori is highly intelligent and methodical. He's curious, he likes to understand everything that's going on. He's creative in his use of his powers- he's the first one we see to use the technique of layer kekkai for greater effect. As previously stated, he's observant, and has a good memory for what he observes. He tends towards long-term thinking. If something or someone may be useful to him in the future, he'll hold onto it or them for years. Anger can be a powerful motivating force for him (arguably his most powerful motivating force), but he controls it. He waits for his time, for the best opportunity to act. Even in his fight with Ogi, after Ogi causes the death of several members of the Yagyou, Masamori first seeks a truce, realizing that at that moment he is at a disadvantage and would be better served by gaining more time to discover a method to destroy Ogi. He is also unflinchingly pragmatic. If the only way to gain an important ally for the Yagou is to give away some information about his family, he'll do it. It's a question of who is more likely to be truly hurt- that is his first priority.
Beneath the big brother act, and driving the intelligence, is a proud, angry individual. Masamori wants to be the best. He wants to have control. He doesn't take slights to himself well, and takes threats to "his" people even more badly. He may not act impulsively on his anger, but man, can he ever hold a grudge. He doesn't trust easily, preferring to handle everything he can by himself.
But he is, in his way, a good guy. He genuinely cares about "his" people and wants them to lead relatively safe, happy lives. He'll fight for that. He'll fight dirty if he thinks that's the best way to make sure they're protected. He expresses horror at leaders who use their underlings as canon fodder- that's not how the relationship should work. He'll even avoid hurting his opponents' underlings whenever possible. If he hurts someone innocent, or comes to believe someone deserves a chance to be saved, he'll expend all his available resources in that effort, even at the cost of some of his ambitions.
For all his seeming control, he can act rather illogically at times. He has a strong sense of both responsibility and guilt. He is the one who has to protect the Yagyou, he is the one who has to stop an old friend who has become an ayakashi. He perceives it as his duty. He blames himself if something wrong, even if there was no reason for him to predict it, and he'll take it upon himself to fix things. This leads to him occasionally doing things like taking on possibly suicidal missions by himself.
Masamori has a serious inferiority complex, courtesy of Yoshimori and other powerful figures (including his mother). He is not good enough, or strong enough. He hates being ineffective or powerless, but also feels that he's fated to be that way. It's why he fights hard for and clings to the power he has, why he keeps such a proud attitude, and why he works himself to the absolute limit of his abilities. He's not "special," even though he's been surrounded by people who are. He wants that kind of recognition desperately, and harbors rather bitter feelings towards those who make it through life because they're "chosen" or just possess more natural talent (and even when someone's not really doing that, Masamori can be inclined to see them that way).
Compared to the "chosen" Yoshimori, Masamori is the angry one, the ambitious one, the overly proud one, the bitter one. And Masamori knows it. "My pride, my immaturity...it's all detestable," he thinks at one point. But for all that he realizes this and wishes he could be as good as Yoshimori, Masamori doesn't really see how he can change. He feels that he has been exiled to the shadows (even if, in truth, he's the one who put and keeps himself there) and that all he can do is use that fact to protect the people who are closer to the light.
Background: (I'm sorry about this but the Kekkaishi wiki isn't very good and has anime information that I disavow)
Prior to his first appearance in canon: Masamori was born into the Sumimura family, one of the two families of Kekkaishi ("barrier masters") which have for generations protected the sacred and magically dangerous ground of Karasumori (on top of which a combined middle and high school now sits). Unlike his grandfather, Masamori was not born with the "houin" mark on his right hand that would mark him as a legitimate successor, the most honored and useful of Kekkaishi. But that was of little consequence. After all, Masamori's mother wasn't a legitimate successor either (though incredibly powerful and skilled). The mark has been known to skip a number of generations, especially when one legitimate successor is still alive. Masamori was smart and gifted, and started receiving training for his abilities at a young age. You don't have to be a legitimate successor to protect Karasumori.
Then, when Masamori was seven, his younger brother Yoshimori was born. Yoshimori had the houin mark.
Since then Masamori's has revolved around two things- excelling at what he does and wondering why he wasn't chosen to be a legitimate successor. This isn't to say he was a bad brother. He tried to be helpful and understanding. But he was left constantly questioning himself, and more than a little angry, with the result that at the very least he came across as aloof (to Yoshimori, that is. to others he was a more positive figure).
When he was around 15 or 16, Masamori left home (his grandfather sent a shikigami to finish high school for him) and joined the Urakai ("Shadow Organization"), an organization of people with unusual abilities who, for one reason or another, either couldn't inherent the family business or had none to inherit. The Urakai investigate and resolve paranormal matters which cannot be solved by other means, and attempt to generally regulate the unseen world of Japan. Upon joining the organization Masamori was largely tutored by "the immortal" Mudou, a man with a somewhat Machiavellian world view but who taught and was well-respected by the younger members of the Urakai. Masamori found himself discontent with the existing structure of the Urakai and, encouraged by Mudou, founded his own task force. The Yagyou ("Night Troop"), as they came to be called, became a group which specialized in eliminating urgent threats, and was largely composed of younger members, doubling as both a form of on-the-job training and, for many, serving as a family. As the chief of the Yagyou, Masamori obtained a great deal of status and power within the Urakai at a remarkably young age (at the most, he would have been seventeen). Mudou, in the meantime, became an ayakashi and a mass murderer.
canon appearances by arc: Masamori's introduction (chapters 30-35): Masamori is introduced as a somewhat sinister figure, a rising power in the Urakai and the person who led the demon-user Kasuga Yomi to try to take advantage of Karasumori's power. Following this, Masamori makes his first trip back home in years, and is shown to be a friendly, well-liked member of the family and community (with the exception of Yoshimori, who has something of an inferiority complex centered around Masamori and who gets defensive as a result). Masamori brings a new ayakashi to the Karsumori grounds to see how Yoshimori (and Tokine) deal with it, but it seems that this is a form of tough love just as much as it is a method of gathering information, and when Masamori leaves again it's after encouraging Yoshimori to pursue his goals.
Kokoburou arc (chapters 42-141, though Masamori isn't involved in many of those): A group of ayakashi known as the Kokoburou begin to threaten Karasumori, at first with fairly low-level creatures. As part of the Urakai's growing interest in Karasumori and for some personal reasons, Masamori sends Shishio Gen, a 14-year-old member of the Yagyou, to Karasumori to help the kekkaishi there. Masamori is promoted to the Urakai's executive committee, the Council of Twelve, which has a seat open in the wake of Mudou's desertion. The Kokuburou increases its attacks against Karasumori, and Masamori continues to aid the defense by such methods as temporarily sending one of the Yagyou teachers to help train Gen and the kekkaishi to work together and helping a particular ayakashi expert stage his own death. Masamori intends to go with the bulk of the Yagyou to Karasumori in expectation of a major offense by the Kokuburou, but first is sent on another mission that requires a great deal of manpower. Because of this, a major attack by the Kokuburou results in Gen's death, which Masamori arrives to late to see. Masamori and the Yagyou then set up around Karasumori and prepare for the next major invasion by the Kokuburou, which they repel. Unfortunately Yoshimori and one of the Yagyou, Sen, are taken to Kokuburou headquarters, in an alternate dimension. The other kekkaishi and the Yagyou manage to get through to the Kokuburou castle, but by then Yoshimori and others have taken care of pretty much everything and all that's left to do is get them out. Everyone returns home.
Black box arc (chapters 134-147): While the bulk of this arc doesn't involve Masamori, it's a demonstrative arc. Ogi Ichirou, a member of the Council of Twelve who Masamori does not get along with, pushes for another member of the council to investigate Karsumori. Okuni, the member of the council in charge of the investigative branch, volunteers, and is supposed to have Masamori as a guide. However, mysterious black boxes appear at Yagyou headquarters (and in Karasumori) with the result that two of the children in the organization go missing. Masamori stays at headquarters to try to take care of the boxes, which also eventually have ayakashi sent out of them, while sending his second-in-command to Karusumori. Eventually, through their own efforts the children escape and are found, and the black boxes are neutralized. Okuni tells the Council that Karasumori should remain in the care of the kekkaishi for now, but that only leaves Masamori suspicious of her. Not to mention angry with Ogi, who pretty clearly planned this.
Mudou arc (chapters 154-165): Having been hunting for Mudou since the man became an ayakashi and killed a lot of people, including some of Masamori's subordinates, Masamori finally locates him in a shinyuuchi (sacred land, another somewhat alternate but connected universe) near Karasumori. Currently low on manpower, Masamori asks Yoshimori to come along as back up. Masamori hunts Mudou down, Yoshimori gets involved by accident along with the Lord of the shinyuuchi, there is an epic showdown in which some of the brothers' issues are aired and Mudou tries to Masamori to joing the dark side. Masamori, however, resists, and the Lord of the shinyuuchi ultimately defeats Mudou by destroying his own world, to recreate it later. Masamori is seriously injured but manages to get out and is taken back to the Yagyou healers, so he recovers quickly.
Things that I can't quite classify into the next segment (chapters 166-169): Masamori begins a restructuring of the Yagyou, calling back the telepath Sazanami who had been in charge of the Yagyou's intelligence. While Sazanami had betrayed the Yagyou, giving information to Ogi, Masamori makes sure that Sazanami wants to cooperate again. Or else. Masamori also sends two young members of the Yagyou, Sen and Shuu, to Karasumori, primarily for intelligence purposes.
[Canon] Masamori Sumimura | Kekkaishi | not reserved
Name: Orlando
Age: 24
Personal Journal:
E-mail: agreylady@gmail.com
AIM/MSN/etc: Elspeth Vimes
CHARACTER
Name: Masamori Sumimura
Canon: Kekkaishi
Age: 21 (possibly 22 by this point in canon, it's unclear)
Timeline: Mid-chapter 318 (after leaving Yomi)
If playing another character from the same canon, how will you deal with this?: n/a
Personality:
On the surface, Masamori is everything you could want in an older brother figure. He's friendly and easygoing, frequently seen with a smile on his face. He takes an interest in people, in their interests, and in how they're doing both individually and in relation to others. He's observant, and tries to give people appropriate attention. He can be teasing, but it's good-natured teasing, and only to people he knows can handle it. He's encouraging, recognizing potential strengths and trying to foster them. He frequently give people second and third chances, believing that they will pay off (and often, it does), and even if it doesn't quite work as planned valuable lessons will be gained. He is apparently very forgiving. He frequently doesn't punish people for mistakes and moves past some betrayals.
He's been accused of being "soft," on account of his willingness to let mistakes go and even to accept known traitors back into the fold for a second chance. Masamori is not soft. People fall into three categories with him. There the people who are "his," his family or the family he has made with the Yagyou. He cares about these people and will protect them in any way he can. There are the people he can use, the ones he doesn't trust but knows he can manipulate or benefit from. And then there are his enemies, the ones who threaten or harm "his" people without having something to offer him. Masamori doesn't really make enemies lightly. But when he does, he is out to destroy them completely.
Masamori is highly intelligent and methodical. He's curious, he likes to understand everything that's going on. He's creative in his use of his powers- he's the first one we see to use the technique of layer kekkai for greater effect. As previously stated, he's observant, and has a good memory for what he observes. He tends towards long-term thinking. If something or someone may be useful to him in the future, he'll hold onto it or them for years. Anger can be a powerful motivating force for him (arguably his most powerful motivating force), but he controls it. He waits for his time, for the best opportunity to act. Even in his fight with Ogi, after Ogi causes the death of several members of the Yagyou, Masamori first seeks a truce, realizing that at that moment he is at a disadvantage and would be better served by gaining more time to discover a method to destroy Ogi. He is also unflinchingly pragmatic. If the only way to gain an important ally for the Yagou is to give away some information about his family, he'll do it. It's a question of who is more likely to be truly hurt- that is his first priority.
Beneath the big brother act, and driving the intelligence, is a proud, angry individual. Masamori wants to be the best. He wants to have control. He doesn't take slights to himself well, and takes threats to "his" people even more badly. He may not act impulsively on his anger, but man, can he ever hold a grudge. He doesn't trust easily, preferring to handle everything he can by himself.
But he is, in his way, a good guy. He genuinely cares about "his" people and wants them to lead relatively safe, happy lives. He'll fight for that. He'll fight dirty if he thinks that's the best way to make sure they're protected. He expresses horror at leaders who use their underlings as canon fodder- that's not how the relationship should work. He'll even avoid hurting his opponents' underlings whenever possible. If he hurts someone innocent, or comes to believe someone deserves a chance to be saved, he'll expend all his available resources in that effort, even at the cost of some of his ambitions.
For all his seeming control, he can act rather illogically at times. He has a strong sense of both responsibility and guilt. He is the one who has to protect the Yagyou, he is the one who has to stop an old friend who has become an ayakashi. He perceives it as his duty. He blames himself if something wrong, even if there was no reason for him to predict it, and he'll take it upon himself to fix things. This leads to him occasionally doing things like taking on possibly suicidal missions by himself.
Masamori has a serious inferiority complex, courtesy of Yoshimori and other powerful figures (including his mother). He is not good enough, or strong enough. He hates being ineffective or powerless, but also feels that he's fated to be that way. It's why he fights hard for and clings to the power he has, why he keeps such a proud attitude, and why he works himself to the absolute limit of his abilities. He's not "special," even though he's been surrounded by people who are. He wants that kind of recognition desperately, and harbors rather bitter feelings towards those who make it through life because they're "chosen" or just possess more natural talent (and even when someone's not really doing that, Masamori can be inclined to see them that way).
Compared to the "chosen" Yoshimori, Masamori is the angry one, the ambitious one, the overly proud one, the bitter one. And Masamori knows it. "My pride, my immaturity...it's all detestable," he thinks at one point. But for all that he realizes this and wishes he could be as good as Yoshimori, Masamori doesn't really see how he can change. He feels that he has been exiled to the shadows (even if, in truth, he's the one who put and keeps himself there) and that all he can do is use that fact to protect the people who are closer to the light.
Background: (I'm sorry about this but the Kekkaishi wiki isn't very good and has anime information that I disavow)
Prior to his first appearance in canon:
Masamori was born into the Sumimura family, one of the two families of Kekkaishi ("barrier masters") which have for generations protected the sacred and magically dangerous ground of Karasumori (on top of which a combined middle and high school now sits). Unlike his grandfather, Masamori was not born with the "houin" mark on his right hand that would mark him as a legitimate successor, the most honored and useful of Kekkaishi. But that was of little consequence. After all, Masamori's mother wasn't a legitimate successor either (though incredibly powerful and skilled). The mark has been known to skip a number of generations, especially when one legitimate successor is still alive. Masamori was smart and gifted, and started receiving training for his abilities at a young age. You don't have to be a legitimate successor to protect Karasumori.
Then, when Masamori was seven, his younger brother Yoshimori was born. Yoshimori had the houin mark.
Since then Masamori's has revolved around two things- excelling at what he does and wondering why he wasn't chosen to be a legitimate successor. This isn't to say he was a bad brother. He tried to be helpful and understanding. But he was left constantly questioning himself, and more than a little angry, with the result that at the very least he came across as aloof (to Yoshimori, that is. to others he was a more positive figure).
When he was around 15 or 16, Masamori left home (his grandfather sent a shikigami to finish high school for him) and joined the Urakai ("Shadow Organization"), an organization of people with unusual abilities who, for one reason or another, either couldn't inherent the family business or had none to inherit. The Urakai investigate and resolve paranormal matters which cannot be solved by other means, and attempt to generally regulate the unseen world of Japan. Upon joining the organization Masamori was largely tutored by "the immortal" Mudou, a man with a somewhat Machiavellian world view but who taught and was well-respected by the younger members of the Urakai. Masamori found himself discontent with the existing structure of the Urakai and, encouraged by Mudou, founded his own task force. The Yagyou ("Night Troop"), as they came to be called, became a group which specialized in eliminating urgent threats, and was largely composed of younger members, doubling as both a form of on-the-job training and, for many, serving as a family. As the chief of the Yagyou, Masamori obtained a great deal of status and power within the Urakai at a remarkably young age (at the most, he would have been seventeen). Mudou, in the meantime, became an ayakashi and a mass murderer.
canon appearances by arc:
Masamori's introduction (chapters 30-35): Masamori is introduced as a somewhat sinister figure, a rising power in the Urakai and the person who led the demon-user Kasuga Yomi to try to take advantage of Karasumori's power. Following this, Masamori makes his first trip back home in years, and is shown to be a friendly, well-liked member of the family and community (with the exception of Yoshimori, who has something of an inferiority complex centered around Masamori and who gets defensive as a result). Masamori brings a new ayakashi to the Karsumori grounds to see how Yoshimori (and Tokine) deal with it, but it seems that this is a form of tough love just as much as it is a method of gathering information, and when Masamori leaves again it's after encouraging Yoshimori to pursue his goals.
Kokoburou arc (chapters 42-141, though Masamori isn't involved in many of those): A group of ayakashi known as the Kokoburou begin to threaten Karasumori, at first with fairly low-level creatures. As part of the Urakai's growing interest in Karasumori and for some personal reasons, Masamori sends Shishio Gen, a 14-year-old member of the Yagyou, to Karasumori to help the kekkaishi there. Masamori is promoted to the Urakai's executive committee, the Council of Twelve, which has a seat open in the wake of Mudou's desertion. The Kokuburou increases its attacks against Karasumori, and Masamori continues to aid the defense by such methods as temporarily sending one of the Yagyou teachers to help train Gen and the kekkaishi to work together and helping a particular ayakashi expert stage his own death. Masamori intends to go with the bulk of the Yagyou to Karasumori in expectation of a major offense by the Kokuburou, but first is sent on another mission that requires a great deal of manpower. Because of this, a major attack by the Kokuburou results in Gen's death, which Masamori arrives to late to see. Masamori and the Yagyou then set up around Karasumori and prepare for the next major invasion by the Kokuburou, which they repel. Unfortunately Yoshimori and one of the Yagyou, Sen, are taken to Kokuburou headquarters, in an alternate dimension. The other kekkaishi and the Yagyou manage to get through to the Kokuburou castle, but by then Yoshimori and others have taken care of pretty much everything and all that's left to do is get them out. Everyone returns home.
Black box arc (chapters 134-147): While the bulk of this arc doesn't involve Masamori, it's a demonstrative arc. Ogi Ichirou, a member of the Council of Twelve who Masamori does not get along with, pushes for another member of the council to investigate Karsumori. Okuni, the member of the council in charge of the investigative branch, volunteers, and is supposed to have Masamori as a guide. However, mysterious black boxes appear at Yagyou headquarters (and in Karasumori) with the result that two of the children in the organization go missing. Masamori stays at headquarters to try to take care of the boxes, which also eventually have ayakashi sent out of them, while sending his second-in-command to Karusumori. Eventually, through their own efforts the children escape and are found, and the black boxes are neutralized. Okuni tells the Council that Karasumori should remain in the care of the kekkaishi for now, but that only leaves Masamori suspicious of her. Not to mention angry with Ogi, who pretty clearly planned this.
Mudou arc (chapters 154-165): Having been hunting for Mudou since the man became an ayakashi and killed a lot of people, including some of Masamori's subordinates, Masamori finally locates him in a shinyuuchi (sacred land, another somewhat alternate but connected universe) near Karasumori. Currently low on manpower, Masamori asks Yoshimori to come along as back up. Masamori hunts Mudou down, Yoshimori gets involved by accident along with the Lord of the shinyuuchi, there is an epic showdown in which some of the brothers' issues are aired and Mudou tries to Masamori to joing the dark side. Masamori, however, resists, and the Lord of the shinyuuchi ultimately defeats Mudou by destroying his own world, to recreate it later. Masamori is seriously injured but manages to get out and is taken back to the Yagyou healers, so he recovers quickly.
Things that I can't quite classify into the next segment (chapters 166-169): Masamori begins a restructuring of the Yagyou, calling back the telepath Sazanami who had been in charge of the Yagyou's intelligence. While Sazanami had betrayed the Yagyou, giving information to Ogi, Masamori makes sure that Sazanami wants to cooperate again. Or else. Masamori also sends two young members of the Yagyou, Sen and Shuu, to Karasumori, primarily for intelligence purposes.