- Danny fights some ghosts from a future where he has turned into a raging omnicidal maniac due to all his friends and family dying horrible deaths because he cheated on a test. (Yes, really.) He later finds out that, if he doesn't find some way to stop his future self, their deaths will be repeated and the bad future might come to pass again. So with the help of his friends and the ghostly master of time, Clockwork, he manages to fix everything. - CLONES. Vlad makes them. Of Danny. Five of them. But none of them are stable and are thus failures—except for the fifth, who is thus far stable but needs a particular piece of Danny's DNA to be complete. So Vlad kidnaps Danny with the help of Dani, the female failed clone. That is, until Dani rebels and fights alongside Danny to kick Vlad's ass. In the process, the perfect clone is destroyed and Vlad goes batshit insane and has a complete breakdown. Thankfully, they manage to get out of there safely and go back home. - Vlad, after his breakdown, shifts gears from “make Danny my apprentice” to “make Danny's life a living hell.” To do this, he runs for mayor of Amity Park and wins, due to rigging the votes. What ensues is Danny Phantom: The Political Edition as Vlad makes absurd laws and Danny finds ways to counteract them. At the end, although most of the ridiculous rules Vlad's instated are revoked, Vlad remains as mayor. It is after this point that Danny is taken from Amity Park
Personality: Danny, like many teenagers, loves hanging out with his friends and playing video games, thinks his parents are embarrassing, and doesn't enjoy school. But, as it always is with these goshdarn teenage superheroes, there is more to him than meets the eye. For one thing, all that superheroing means he's pretty confident nowadays (compared to the wallflower he was at the start of the show who only wanted to fit in) and is happy to be unpopular, as long as he has his friends. He's not afraid to step up if he has to, even if it means doing so as the loser Fenton.
The boy also carries a lot of responsibility on his shoulders. In his own words, “if not me, then who's gonna protect this town?” It might have something to do with the fact that if he hadn't activated the portal, ghosts wouldn't be an issue in the first place. It doesn't matter how many times he gets thrown into a wall, or electrocuted, or framed for taking the mayor hostage—keeping Amity Park safe is his responsibility, and he'll do whatever it takes to do that.
Speaking of, there is nothing more important to Danny than his friends and family. He fights to keep them safe, even if the friend he's trying to keep safe is about to shoot him in the face. Danny is very much a person shaped by the people around him, and he knows it—at least, he is aware of it enough that he wouldn't give them up for any reason short of death. And it is only around his friends and family that Danny is completely relaxed and a jokester even though his puns are terrible. Sometimes they annoy him or make him angry, but when push comes to shove, they're of utmost importance to him. (In other words, it is a Really Bad Idea to hurt them.)
He can be pretty naïve, too. He believes that those who support him are good, and that ghost hunters and most ghosts are bad. He makes exceptions, however, for people like Valerie and ghosts like Clockwork, but they are the exception, rather than the norm. On the whole, he has a clean black-and-white view of morality, whether he realizes it or not. For one thing, it means less of a headache about morals, and for another, it makes it much easier to work out who to punch.
Danny is also quite the optimist. Sure, he gets down on himself sometimes like any other person, but he never gives up. He always sees that light at the end of the tunnel and refuses to believe that he can't do something if he particularly wants to. Maybe that's why he's still trying to become an astronaut, despite his lackluster grades and physical skills in human form.
because I'm the only prompt one around here--I mean, shit, look at those two early asswads up there!
- CLONES. Vlad makes them. Of Danny. Five of them. But none of them are stable and are thus failures—except for the fifth, who is thus far stable but needs a particular piece of Danny's DNA to be complete. So Vlad kidnaps Danny with the help of Dani, the female failed clone. That is, until Dani rebels and fights alongside Danny to kick Vlad's ass. In the process, the perfect clone is destroyed and Vlad goes batshit insane and has a complete breakdown. Thankfully, they manage to get out of there safely and go back home.
- Vlad, after his breakdown, shifts gears from “make Danny my apprentice” to “make Danny's life a living hell.” To do this, he runs for mayor of Amity Park and wins, due to rigging the votes. What ensues is Danny Phantom: The Political Edition as Vlad makes absurd laws and Danny finds ways to counteract them. At the end, although most of the ridiculous rules Vlad's instated are revoked, Vlad remains as mayor. It is after this point that Danny is taken from Amity Park
Personality: Danny, like many teenagers, loves hanging out with his friends and playing video games, thinks his parents are embarrassing, and doesn't enjoy school. But, as it always is with these goshdarn teenage superheroes, there is more to him than meets the eye. For one thing, all that superheroing means he's pretty confident nowadays (compared to the wallflower he was at the start of the show who only wanted to fit in) and is happy to be unpopular, as long as he has his friends. He's not afraid to step up if he has to, even if it means doing so as the loser Fenton.
The boy also carries a lot of responsibility on his shoulders. In his own words, “if not me, then who's gonna protect this town?” It might have something to do with the fact that if he hadn't activated the portal, ghosts wouldn't be an issue in the first place. It doesn't matter how many times he gets thrown into a wall, or electrocuted, or framed for taking the mayor hostage—keeping Amity Park safe is his responsibility, and he'll do whatever it takes to do that.
Speaking of, there is nothing more important to Danny than his friends and family. He fights to keep them safe, even if the friend he's trying to keep safe is about to shoot him in the face. Danny is very much a person shaped by the people around him, and he knows it—at least, he is aware of it enough that he wouldn't give them up for any reason short of death. And it is only around his friends and family that Danny is completely relaxed and a jokester
even though his puns are terrible. Sometimes they annoy him or make him angry, but when push comes to shove, they're of utmost importance to him. (In other words, it is a Really Bad Idea to hurt them.)He can be pretty naïve, too. He believes that those who support him are good, and that ghost hunters and most ghosts are bad. He makes exceptions, however, for people like Valerie and ghosts like Clockwork, but they are the exception, rather than the norm. On the whole, he has a clean black-and-white view of morality, whether he realizes it or not. For one thing, it means less of a headache about morals, and for another, it makes it much easier to work out who to punch.
Danny is also quite the optimist. Sure, he gets down on himself sometimes like any other person, but he never gives up. He always sees that light at the end of the tunnel and refuses to believe that he can't do something if he particularly wants to. Maybe that's why he's still trying to become an astronaut, despite his lackluster grades and physical skills in human form.
Sample Entry: Ahoy, cap'n! (http://testrun-box.livejournal.com/267998.html#comments)