CHARACTER SOLIDIFYING. | accepting
36: Do they like to suffer? Like to see other people suffering?
Schadenfreude might be a German invention, but everyone knows which god is responsible for it.
Of course, it’s not as though Loki goes looking for it--now, anyway, and you have to take him at his word--but when it happens (and it has an uncanny way with following in his wake despite that so-called not looking for it) he’s going to be there to soak it in. He used to be much worse about it, what with a mantle like God of Evil.
Really, he’s trying not to enjoy it.
(He just doesn’t mention for how hard that trying is.)
37: How is your character’s imagination? Daydreaming a lot? Worried most of the time? Living in memories?
God of Stories... not a title for the unimaginative, Loki would say. It’s an uniquely important position to wield, what with the gods themselves being creatures of stories and magic more than any concrete biology or laws of reality. Meant to be taken seriously. At least, by everyone else. For him, it’s an activity as second nature to him were it breathing or eating. He often doesn’t have to think about it consciously to begin with.
A born storyteller, Loki’s always piecing together a narrative of some kind be it in his mind or on ensorcelled paper. What with such an active thought process, you might wonder if he worries a lot--and let us be the first to tell you that no, he does not. Ever.
And there is that whole other thing with the scheming...