Writing Primary Characters

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The moment you join Bravo Fleet, you have a Primary Character. This character is the Starfleet officer assigned to one of the Fourth Fleet’s Task Forces as an up-and-coming leader and future starship commander. They are your member dossier’s In-Character representation as an officer of the Fourth Fleet. OOC, they’re the face of your member dossier, the name attached to the ship you’ll get when you make Lieutenant Commander. The ‘avatar’ as you engage with Fleet activities, progress through the ranks, and win awards. Their adventures can happen in fiction or in competitions or even just in your head, but if they’re on the dossier, they’re real to Bravo Fleet.

While you will create them as part of the joining process, we anticipate their development to be an ongoing project. It's okay to start with little more than an idea, or even just a name, and figure out where you're going as you learn more about the fleet and what you enjoy. You can also change your Primary Character. In no way are you committed to your first idea. It's okay for the Primary Character to change and grow as your participation in the fleet does, and as you rise through the ranks.

We encourage that you make your Primary Character distinct and separate from any character you’ll use if you join a Game/Sim. Even if you don’t participate in fiction writing, the idea is that you as a member represent an important, command-level officer (and, eventually, their starship) within the Fleet, not merely a crewmember.

Rank, History, and the Primary Character

When you join, you’re a Cadet. Soon enough, you’re an Ensign. Within a few weeks of activity, you’ll be a Lieutenant Commander. How does that affect your Primary Character?

In short: be flexible. We don’t encourage you to 100% cleave your OOC rank progression to your character’s IC career advancement. It would strain credulity, to say the least, for a Cadet to become a Lieutenant Commander within a few weeks - and then a couple of years later be an Admiral. So, how do you reconcile this?

It’s worth bearing in mind that you won’t spend very long at the junior officer ranks. If you’re an active member who wants to start writing immediately, you’ll probably be an Ensign or even a Lieutenant Junior Grade by the time you’ve finished working out any significant details of your Primary Character! And from there it’s just a few more weeks to Lieutenant Commander, the first significant stretch of time at one rank. Bear this in mind when considering your choices.

You could keep your character’s background fluid, treating it as a work in progress that changes as you reach new OOC ranks. You could adjust their age and history as they rise through the ranks. Or if you’re eager to write your Primary Character while you’re a junior officer, maybe consider writing stories set in their past when they would have held that rank. This can give you a few weeks OOC to flesh out the character’s past.

One option is to disregard OOC rank in your writing. You can create your character as a Commander or a Captain from the beginning, and until you have an avatar ship write stories about them on a starbase assignment, or awaiting a new command. Despite this, the Lore Office expects you to not write your Primary Character at a rank higher than Captain until or unless you have OOC achieved that rank. A Captain is a high enough rank for any kind of story or any kind of character with any level of experience.

My preferred option is a blend of the two. Start writing, or envision your character, at the rank of Lieutenant Commander - or maybe Commander, depending on their age and experience. Write towards that point while you’re a junior officer, developing their history or perhaps their missions at their Task Force HQ while they’re awaiting their command. And once you reach Lieutenant Commander OOC, you can easily wed IC and OOC ranks together, adjusting their history if necessary. This gives some of the fun of sharing the major OOC milestone of reaching Captain with your character if you so wish.

A more dramatic choice is to change your Primary Character as you go up the ranks. Maybe you write a young Cadet when you’re at that rank, perhaps sticking with them as you reach Ensign. You can then write a new Primary Character when you become a lieutenant, and again when you make Lieutenant Commander, or maybe again when you make Commander or even Captain. These characters don’t need to go to ‘waste’ - your starship will need a crew someday, and this way you have a handful of characters with stories you’ve already crafted, ready to go!

Despite all of this, the main rule is: don’t sweat it. While we want ranks to be an entertaining progression, and it can be fun to share those milestones, we don’t ask you to unduly contort your storytelling around them. Respect that OOC ranks are rewards for members’ hard work and commitment to the group, and tell the story you want to tell, and you’ll do fine.