Thread:KnowledgeProspector/@comment-26217707-20130621041223

Name: Bruno

Age: 23

Occupation: Panhandler (homeless)

Ethnicity: Chinese/Caucasian American

Weapons: Nunchucks, Walter PPK/S

Personality: Bruno is very open and friendly, loving to start a conversation about anything--from the most silly and mundane things, to intense and intimate conversations. He loves meeting people and interacting with them, finding out their story and even sharing his own. However, on the anniversary of his partner’s death, Bruno is a completely different person, turning to bursts of rage and irritability when confronted. Otherwise, he’s caring to every person he meets unless they give him a reason not to be.

Backstory: Bruno changed his name to Bruno (vowing never to reveal his real name) after being kicked out of his home at the age 17, for multiple reasons, the main two being his decision to drop out of school and his sexuality. Bruno left willingly, frustrated with his parents’ close mindedness and tight grip on every aspect of his life. Instead of getting a job, he turned to panhandling and traversing across the country for no particular reason, getting to know different people from various backgrounds, which he describes as ‘enlightening.’

While hitchhiking he met a mysterious young man named Nelson, who taught Bruno everything he knows on martial arts, even gifting Bruno an old pair of nunchucks. They traveled together for three years, their friendship eventually turning into a romance as they were each other’s only company for extended periods of time. But, during a hitchhiking attempt gone wrong, two men stopped on the side of the road and assaulted both Bruno and Nelson, taking their meager belongings. Nelson’s attempts to fight back weren’t appreciated and he got the worst of the beating; he died from his injuries, and Bruno was back on his own. Still, he didn’t let Nelson’s death break him or his positive point of view.

Actor: Ezra Miller (preferably a longer-haired picture like so or this) You knows what I mean. 