Anonymous said: Could you do the Rogue of Space?

Powers: CA
The Rogue and the Thief are the passive-active pair for the Stealing class. Where Thieves are believed to be predominantly female, Rogues don’t have that thing going for them (and it’s not like we would have changed the pronouns regarding the player anyway, so screw that). The difference between the two is that the results of Thieves’ stealing is a self-boon, whereas the results of a Rogue’s stealing is a boon for every member of their team. The best example we’ve got of this is Roxy, the Rogue of Void, stealing the nothingness of a certain space to create the Matriorb for her friend Kanaya and for the good of all trollkind.
So, Rogue of Space, what can they do? Well, to start out, one of the first powers I can think of would be stealing the size or speed of one or more enemies to hand out amongst their friends. Make a team of giants against an army of ants (fun fact: that is actually what a group of ants is called), or, rather, ant-sized opponents, or have your friends running circles around the Black King. The powers of a Rogue of Space also include stealing position. If an enemy stands where your allies want to be, you can essentially force the two to swap positions. Fun stuff. It might also be possible that a Rogue of Space would be able to outright steal an enemy’s existence, their birth, another piece of what Space is, given how it’s connected to the Genesis Frog. Simply take that and put it somewhere else, perhaps birthing alternate versions of a desired object somewhere out in Paradox Space, perhaps achieving a miracle like turning water into wine right in their hands. NOTE THAT this would be very difficult for even the best Rogue of Space to accomplish (similar to how Roxy had to actually learn to use a fair deal of Void-y shit before she could un-nothing the Matriorb), and it would likely be much more trouble than it’s actually worth, because it could potentially alter so much more than one can fathom without the aid of a Mind player (preferably a Seer, but a Page could probably give the Rogue enough Mind power necessary to figure things out). This gets terribly close to Time and Mind territory, though, so if a Rogue is to attempt it, the best thing to do would be to consult with their Time and/or Mind players before even attempting it.
Something that’s worth noting about Rogues as individuals rather than just their abilities or roles would definitely be their connection to their Aspect: pre-session, they’re always full of it. Nepeta with her shipping walls (Heart), Rufioh with the ability to fly (Breath), Roxy with her slurred speech and typos (Void). But after the game starts, due to either being too busy to think of maintaining their prior habits, or another players’ intervention (violent or otherwise), that reflection’s over with (I tend to theorize that if Rogues don’t actually reach god tier before their session ends, like Nepeta, they go back to their old habit, like Nepeta with her new shipping walls on the meteor, but I have little proof to back this for sure). So this would mean that our Rogue of Space would exhibit themes related to Space, such as creativity or birth. This Rogue could be a writer, a painter, a singer, a musician,or maybe a gardener of some sort. But once the session starts, they likely stop creating, probably because they’d be too busy to continue. But that creativity stays with them, shaped them as a person, and they may very well return to it in the end.
Weapons: TC
Spacey-wacey. Ok.
Well, Rogues, as I have stated in at least one previous post, tend to use weapons designed for killing. Roxy uses a sniper rifle, a weapon used for quiet assassinations from a distance, Nepeta used claws which she used for hunting, and what is hunting if not killing for survival, and Rufioh used a lance, which is used for killing for the sake of competition. As for the Space bit, this would indicate a pattern of guns, transforming objects, or transforming guns. As such, the following seem to be the most likely strife specibi.
Just remember, these are only the most likely suspects. If your character or yourself has no great love of guns, anything traditionally considered a weapon will suffice. The transformation thing can be decided by you.
Land and Quest: TC and CA
Alright, this is actually kind of funny, but for once, we don’t have to do our usual disclaimer! This is our first Space-playing request! Wow.
Okay. So there have been three Space players in all four sessions of Homestuck, two of whose lands we have seen, that would be Jade’s, as the Witch of Space, and Kanaya’s, the Sylph of Space. Of the two, there isn’t actually much in the way of connection. The Land of Frost and Frogs and the The Land of Rays and Frogs were actually surprisingly different, for lands belonging to characters whose tiers were the same Aspect. And I guess it’s because they didn’t actually need to be. The quest for all Space players is predefined, anyway, and there are a ton of details that you can decide for yourself as a Space player: climate, lighting, what sort of animals are on the planets (like, the small ones, like John’s fireflies and Jade’s hummingbirds), practically everything! Just keep in mind that there are two things that a Space player’s land needs: some form of water around the land (Jade’s snow, Kanaya’s ocean), and a volcano, which is, presumably the Forge.
The quest of the Space player is the most important quest of all. Even if all others succeed in their quests, even if the Black King is defeated, if this quest fails, it doesn’t matter: for without the Genesis Frog being formed, there is no universe for the players to arrive in on the other side of that door. Presumably, though, there is a secondary quest for the Space player—I mean, come on, if it was as easy as simply birthing a universe in a frog, you KNOW that there would be a lot more problems for the session in general to face. If you want one specifically formed for a Rogue of Space, something that helps them understand their abilities, it would probably be corralling the frogs. Let’s say…the Rogue’s world is covered in forests, brush so dense that it’s nigh impossible for the Rogue to find the frogs necessary to finish their true quest. The Rogue would have to steal a section of that forest in order to provide a space for the frogs. See what I did there? Stealing Space to give Space. It’ll be much simpler to find the frogs necessary now that so many of them are in one place.

Powers: CA
The Rogue and the Thief are the passive-active pair for the Stealing class. Where the Thief steals their Aspect and the results of such is applied directly to themselves, the Rogue is, as Roxy put it, a veritable Robin Hood: steal and divide amongst however allies need it. Thieves’ and Rogues’ abilities are quite similar in that manner and often have quite the same effect on the enemy from which their Aspect is stolen, but there is a far more different effect on their allies. With the Rogue, there is an increase in whatever Aspect the Rogue steals. While the only god tier Rogue is Roxy, her abilities still fit into this concept, as she steals the Nothingness from the thin air in order to create things. While this ability is far from mastery on her end, she has been able to summon completely generic objects, and completely generic objects mutated with Matriorbs. True to Void style, no one knows how she manages this.
So, a Rogue of Time would be able to steal Time and divide it up amongst their allies, and this could mean a variety of abilities. The first thing that came to mind was the ability to steal Time from enemies. This could mean something like keeping them locked in a certain place and time, stealing seconds, minutes, hours, years, who knows how much Time, until the Rogue has to let them go. All this Time that’s stolen, though, what does it do for the allies it’s given to? Well, there are potentially two effects. For a player who’s on the brink of death, these minutes or hours would be able to prolong their life- painfully, of course, as there’s a downside to everything, but staving off death all the same until something can be done about the hole in their abdomen or the twin stab marks on their chest. Another potential ability these minutes have is something akin to a cell phone plan. For the minutes, hours, or years the Rogue provides them with, the ally will be able to stop time, or perhaps execute time travel as well. Now, this could provide some problems for Time, given how Time travel tends to be a bit problematic without a bit of a guiding force. Imaginably, these minutes of time travel ought to come with some long as fuck lectures on how to use them, and the right to revoke these privileges if the minutes are used in an irresponsible manner. You cause a paradox? No more time travel for you. Bad. Sit in the corner and think about what you’ve done.
And then, of course, the Rogue would have the usual Time player time-travelling abilities to boot. Rogues of Time are truly powerful.
Another thing that’s worth noting about the Rogue class is that they have the innate tendency to reflect their Aspect before the session starts. Rufioh reflected Breath with his ability to fly and his enhanced freedom that way, Nepeta reflected Heart with her shipping walls, and Roxy reflected Void with her nigh unintelligible, drunken typing. But when the session is actually in play, however, these tendencies to reflect their Aspect disappears. Rufioh became paralyzed from the neck down, Nepeta stopped shipping until she was back on the meteor, and Roxy became sober. So a Rogue of Time might have a lot of connections to death. If they were human, their parental figure(s) might run a funeral parlor, or they might show an interest in things like autopsy. If they’re a troll, they might be keen on becoming an executioner of some sort or they have a job providing food for a lusus, like Vriska or Eridan. But as soon as the Rogue’s session starts, they’re all for creating things, and giving their allies the needed time to do it, even without their god tier powers. They would be distant until communicated with, all for completing their own quest first and foremost, but willing to stop and help their teammates when needed. The Space player for their session is lucky to have them.
Weapons: TC
Well, this is just lovely. Two of the toughest patterns to find. Rogue weapons AND Time weapons. Great. Well, I’ll start with the Rogue ones.
Well, the three Rogue weapons are a rifle, a lance, and claws. They don’t have much in common except for that their purpose is clear. These weapons, in a way similar to the Page, are meant for the purpose of killing. As for Time players, they use weapons that are symbolic of themselves, such as Dave’s sword symbolizing him growing up in his brother’s shadow, Aradia’s telekinesis, which was her special ability, along with a whip which symbolized her interests, and Damara’s needles, which were her personal fashion statement.
As such, you need to find a weapon meant only for killing that is symbolic of your character’s or your own self. Since I do not know about you very much at all, Mr./Mrs./Mx. Anon, I will simply give you Rogue weapons and you apply the rest.
Land and Quest: TC and CA
Alright, so we’re going to start off with our usual disclaimer: if you’re having trouble coming up with a good Aspect word for your land, thepageofhopes has a wonderful word list. TC and I suggest you use it.
So, Time lands. As of this moment, there have been five sessions that we have seen in Homestuck, only four of which had a Time player, one of which whose land we never saw, and one of which whose session only had one player, and therefore provides no evidence of a Time land to which we might be able to provide any commentary. Thankfully, though, we still have two lands, and with those, we can take note of patterns. Aradia Megido’s land as the Maid of Time was the Land of Quartz and Melody, and Dave Strider’s land as the Knight of Time was the Land of Heat and Clockwork. There are few obvious connections between the two lands. The Scratch Device is a given, as all Time players’ lands house one, but other than that, there isn’t much there at all. But a possible connection between all Time lands is the references to music in the designs of the buildings and/or the Scratch Device. In Dave’s land, the Scratch Device looks like a giant record sitting on a turntable. In Aradia’s land, all of the buildings look like music boxes. Hell, even with the glance we saw of Damara’s world, her Scratch Device looked like a music box as well! And while this might give some evidence towards the idea that the beta trolls and their dancestors having similar, if not the same, lands (which would make our jobs here so much easier), the more important thing is that this proves that music references in the design of a Time land is very much a thing.
So, putting the arpeggios and treble clefs aside, what would be a good quest for a Rogue of Time? Well, it would obviously let them begin to learn how to use their abilities, hand out Time by slowing down someone or something else. So TC and I were thinking something along the lines of some sort of disaster would come along and it’s the Rogue’s job to try and slow it down to give their consorts more time. This ‘disaster,’ would most likely be something alive, a monster, perhaps the Rogue’s denizen, as it would be very hard for the Rogue to stop something like a volcano or a huge blizzard without their god tier powers, and a quest is meant to be possible to complete even without the Rogue of Time having reached god tier yet. The Rogue would give their consorts as much time as possible to evacuate their habitat before the monster arrived to destroy both it and them by placing obstacles in the creature’s path, or setting up traps for it in the hopes of tiring it out. The Rogue’s time travelling abilities would give them the ability to keep on altering things that need to be altered before the monster arrives, and if they mess up, they pass on the fruits of their research and efforts on to the new Alpha timeline. This isn’t to say they have unlimited chances, but at the very least, the Rogue can know what they’re doing.