10-13-2017, 02:29 PM
No 3 is not necessarily true. As long as the character knows the person they're summoning on a personal level, or knows what they should be, they can generally summon to their heart's content. It's a deliberately vague subject in some respects, to allow for maximum freedom.
If Schwi wanted to try and do that stuff, she could. Bear in mind that summoning is sometimes unconscious, and parts can't always be controlled in such a deliberate way especially when it comes to individuals - sometimes the result will be based on the idea with the strongest feeling, the strongest memory of that person, etcetera. Summoning is a very inexact science. That's more to give you ideas on writing, but for example, Proto Man inadvertently summoned a bunch of NPCs from his world while asleep, actual antagonists for the most part. Samus summoned her previous Commanding Officer Adam Malkovich, but it was as an AI, his last form, not as a human (which he'd probably prefer, on the whole ...).
If Schwi wanted to try and do that stuff, she could. Bear in mind that summoning is sometimes unconscious, and parts can't always be controlled in such a deliberate way especially when it comes to individuals - sometimes the result will be based on the idea with the strongest feeling, the strongest memory of that person, etcetera. Summoning is a very inexact science. That's more to give you ideas on writing, but for example, Proto Man inadvertently summoned a bunch of NPCs from his world while asleep, actual antagonists for the most part. Samus summoned her previous Commanding Officer Adam Malkovich, but it was as an AI, his last form, not as a human (which he'd probably prefer, on the whole ...).
Curious about me and the characters I play? See the 'Staff' page! See also the rosters for my characters Samus Aran or Enel if you'd like to see examples of well-formatted rosters. Hope you enjoy the Omniverse!

