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Bob's west coast childhood growing up in Eugene, OR was comfortable and even privileged. To those raised on the streets of large cities or in the poverty of third-world countries, Bob’s childhood might have seemed like paradise, but Bob saw it as a prison. He admired those who had the freedom to live, to run, and to do as they wanted. As Bob entered his teen years, he hung with those who rebelled against authority and established norms, becoming rougher and wilder even while he grew soft from his family’s upper-class trappings. His parents concern grew with his years. When the time came for all good privileged boys to go to college, his father chose Atraville, knowing physics was the future of America, and thinking the distance may help him find a better group of friends. It didn’t work, because Bob found Cecil Metus, the champion of the Venatio energy fights. Bob was softy hanging with a hard crowd. What will dark energy do to him?
Name etymology: Beundre is Danish for “admire”. There is nothing wrong with heroes; it can even be a good thing. The problem is the object of admiration, which ultimately reflects back upon the admirer. That choice can either lift the admirer to new heights, or cast him to his destruction.
Character research provided by Howard Douglas' senatorial staff.
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