Leet: Difference between revisions
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==Personality== | ==Personality== | ||
Both Über and Leet are demonstrated to be despicable human beings, having no problems with beating prostitutes on the street | Both Über and Leet are demonstrated to be despicable human beings, having no problems with beating prostitutes on the street to gain online viewers.<ref name=":1" /> Leet himself owns several t-shirts that are deliberately shocking, examples being one mocking [[Endbringers|Endbringer]] victims and another depicting obscene sexual imagery.<ref name=":3">[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rTH9KfVmNcGqUiC-vQi_w9TM6muHDpgZ6KAv9hokOhg/edit Leet Quest]</ref> | ||
Ostensibly, Leet is a fan of videogames. He and Über made it a "mission" to spread the artform of videogames.<ref>“Our mission is worth it,” Leet raised his chin – inasmuch as he had one – a notch. <br /><br /> | Ostensibly, Leet is a fan of videogames. He and Über made it a "mission" to spread the artform of videogames.<ref>“Our mission is worth it,” Leet raised his chin – inasmuch as he had one – a notch. <br /><br />“Right,” Tattletale said, “Spreading the word about the noble and underrated art form that is video games. That's from your website, word for word. People don't watch your show because they think you're righteous. They watch because you're so lame it's funny.” - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2011/10/11/shell-4-6/ Excerpt] from [[Shell 4.6]]</ref> | ||
“Right,” Tattletale said, “Spreading the word about the noble and underrated art form that is video games. That's from your website, word for word. People don't watch your show because they think you're righteous. They watch because you're so lame it's funny.” - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2011/10/11/shell-4-6/ Excerpt] from [[Shell 4.6]]</ref> | |||
==Appearance== | ==Appearance== | ||
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==Abilities and Powers== | ==Abilities and Powers== | ||
Leet is a tinker whose power allows him to create anything with the drawback of only being able to create it once. He essentially has access to all tinker technology trees, being able to create most things a tinker would be able to specialize in. However, the closer that what he makes is to something he's created before, the higher the chances of a spectacular misfire or failure. By the time that Leet figured this out, he had burned many bridges during his experimentation, limiting his options and leading him to fail very often. This led to him becoming a laughingstock among other parahumans, though his technology could still be quite versatile when | Leet is a tinker whose power allows him to create anything with the drawback of only being able to create it once. He essentially has access to all tinker technology trees, being able to create most things a tinker would be able to specialize in. However, the closer that what he makes is to something he's created before, the higher the chances of a spectacular misfire or failure. By the time that Leet figured this out, he had burned many bridges during his experimentation, limiting his options and leading him to fail very often. This led to him becoming a laughingstock among other parahumans, though his technology could still be quite versatile when working correctly.<ref name="cast2">'''Über and Leet''' '''(Missing)''' – A thinker with the ability to be a master at anything he tries, and a tinker with the ability to build anything, the two only barely managed to be b-list supervillains with a video game theme. Disappeared after working with Coil. - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/cast-spoiler-free/cast/ Cast Page (In Depth)]</ref><ref name=":0">Leet's biggest problem is that it took him time to figure out the 'rule' to his power. He tried a variety of things in attempts to work out what his specialty was, and he burned a lot of bridges. That's not a 'Leet' problem so much as a trap that a lot of people (including many here) would fall into. Word of God - he caught on faster than your average geek might. <br /><br />Now, any time he sits down for a project, he has to cross-check against all the other things he ever made. This isn't end-product related, but works out to components. Example? Power source. He either uses something mundane, or he uses something tinker derived. But if he uses something tinker derived to power his newest project, then he has to think of all the other power sources he's used, make sure that this one is sufficiently different, gauge the risk, and then move forward. Same goes for the mechanisms, the overall design & goal, and so on. <br /><br />Defiant has the 'tinker up efficiency/hybrid/minimized technology' skill tree. Stinger has the 'missile' skill tree. Tecton has the 'Seismic and Architecture' skill trees. Leet has all of them, but all throughout those trees are entire sections with 'Use of this technology has a X% chance to fail'. You get further away from one design, that chance drops, but it's still there. <br /><br />The video game thing was partially personal passion and partially a means of 'categorizing' what he did. On top of a wealth of notes and reference documents, he can think back through the various games he's been inspired by and use that as a mnemonic device to recall what he did for each project. <br /><br />So by the time you/he figure(s) out the 'catch' to the power, the list of options is riddled with fail chances. You know there are a few trees you've not explored yet, but you have to progress carefully. How? You weigh the odds, estimate your chances of failure, trust your one really reliable buddy/sidekick to cover your ass if something blows up, and you do lots of little jobs you can afford to fail until you have the resources to do one big job well with something you're ninety-five percent sure won't blow up in your face. <br /><br />Except he can't really seem to catch a break. He doesn't know it, but he's basically doing the opposite of Jack Slash and Taylor. He's explicitly out of tune with his power, he doesn't nurture it the way others do, even by general conflict - he's a little too cowardly, a little too ''safe,'' in large part, because he's hedging bets as often as not, and it's an unsatisfied shard, more prone to cause chaos for him rather than set him up to pursue it. It's trying to actively disrupt or kill its host so it can move on to greener pastures. <br /><br />To top it all off, yeah, he's annoying, generally unpleasant, and people don't tend to like him. Except for Über. Such is the life of Leet. - [https://forums.spacebattles.com/posts/13876454 Wildbow on Spacebattles]</ref> | ||
Now, any time he sits down for a project, he has to cross-check against all the other things he ever made. This isn't end-product related, but works out to components. Example? Power source. He either uses something mundane, or he uses something tinker derived. But if he uses something tinker derived to power his newest project, then he has to think of all the other power sources he's used, make sure that this one is sufficiently different, gauge the risk, and then move forward. Same goes for the mechanisms, the overall design & goal, and so on. <br /><br /> | |||
Defiant has the 'tinker up efficiency/hybrid/minimized technology' skill tree. Stinger has the 'missile' skill tree. Tecton has the 'Seismic and Architecture' skill trees. Leet has all of them, but all throughout those trees are entire sections with 'Use of this technology has a X% chance to fail'. You get further away from one design, that chance drops, but it's still there. <br /><br /> | |||
The video game thing was partially personal passion and partially a means of 'categorizing' what he did. On top of a wealth of notes and reference documents, he can think back through the various games he's been inspired by and use that as a mnemonic device to recall what he did for each project. <br /><br /> | |||
So by the time you/he figure(s) out the 'catch' to the power, the list of options is riddled with fail chances. You know there are a few trees you've not explored yet, but you have to progress carefully. How? You weigh the odds, estimate your chances of failure, trust your one really reliable buddy/sidekick to cover your ass if something blows up, and you do lots of little jobs you can afford to fail until you have the resources to do one big job well with something you're ninety-five percent sure won't blow up in your face. <br /><br /> | |||
Except he can't really seem to catch a break. He doesn't know it, but he's basically doing the opposite of Jack Slash and Taylor. He's explicitly out of tune with his power, he doesn't nurture it the way others do, even by general conflict - he's a little too cowardly, a little too ''safe,'' in large part, because he's hedging bets as often as not, and it's an unsatisfied shard, more prone to cause chaos for him rather than set him up to pursue it. It's trying to actively disrupt or kill its host so it can move on to greener pastures. <br /><br /> | |||
To top it all off, yeah, he's annoying, generally unpleasant, and people don't tend to like him. Except for Über. Such is the life of Leet. - [https://forums.spacebattles.com/posts/13876454 Wildbow on Spacebattles]</ref | |||
Behind the scenes, Leet's [[shard]] is actually working against him. His tendency to play it safe with his power puts him completely out of tune with his shard, causing it to punish him by being harsher with its restrictions and making his power malfunction. In essence, it is actively trying to kill Leet so that it can move on to another host.<ref name=":0" /> | Behind the scenes, Leet's [[shard]] is actually working against him. His tendency to play it safe with his power puts him completely out of tune with his shard, causing it to punish him by being harsher with its restrictions and making his power malfunction. In essence, it is actively trying to kill Leet so that it can move on to another host.<ref name=":0" /> | ||
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*'''Unspecified Tracking Device''' - Used by Leet to track the heroes during Coil's attack on the town hall.<ref name=":4" /> | *'''Unspecified Tracking Device''' - Used by Leet to track the heroes during Coil's attack on the town hall.<ref name=":4" /> | ||
*'''Metal Power Armor''' - Worn by Über during Coil's attack on the town hall. Was meant to lift heavy objects. Was able to sustain damage from Kid Win's electricity and concussion shots.<ref name=":4" /> | *'''Metal Power Armor''' - Worn by Über during Coil's attack on the town hall. Was meant to lift heavy objects. Was able to sustain damage from Kid Win's electricity and concussion shots.<ref name=":4" /> | ||
*'''Temperamental Teleportation Tech''' - Used to switch Skitter out with a body double during Coil's betrayal among other feats, had a high chance of malfunctioning.<ref name=":5" | *'''Temperamental Teleportation Tech''' - Used to switch Skitter out with a body double during Coil's betrayal among other feats, had a high chance of malfunctioning.<ref name=":5">“Why didn’t you drop me on top of a bomb?”<br><br>“An unfortunate side effect of Leet’s power. Leet believes it was the proximity to the bomb or the particular signature of the vat of acid that made it so likely to occur, but with my power I observed that it wasn’t merely a chance that the teleportation would fail and your well-trained body double would be caught instead, but a surety. No less than twelve tries with the variables changed slightly. Leet’s power sabotages him, it seems.”<br><br>“Is that Leet’s passenger at work?”<br><br>“Passenger? Ah, that’s what Bonesaw calls the agents. Yes, I suppose that might be the case. In any event, we nearly ran out of time before verifying that guns, fire and alcohol wouldn’t skew his power. Whatever the cause of the errors was.” - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2013/01/05 Excerpt] from [[Monarch 16.13]]</ref> Possibly made by scanning [[Trickster]]'s ability. | ||
*'''Famine Engine''' - Overrode Skitter's powers, commanding bugs around it to swarm and attack. Was used to convince the Undersiders that Skitter had betrayed them.<ref | *'''Famine Engine''' - Overrode Skitter's powers, commanding bugs around it to swarm and attack. Was used to convince the Undersiders that Skitter had betrayed them.<ref>''Did he clone me?'' | ||
No. I could sense the movements of the bugs throughout my range, even if I couldn’t control them. They were moving in a massive, slow spiral, drifting counterclockwise and attacking anyone they came in contact with, and the center of the effect, where they were settling and gathering in piles? A box in the center of one building. - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2013/01/01 Excerpt] from [[Monarch 16.12]]</ref><ref name="FE">"When you went to convince the Mayor of our way of thinking, Trickster carried the devices Leet designed to record the particular signals you use to command your bugs.”<br><br>“Which is how you built the swarm box.”<br><br>“The Famine Engine,” Leet said.<br><br>“Whatever.” - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2013/01/05 Excerpt] from [[Monarch 16.13]]</ref> | |||
*'''Yeti Fister''' - Cryogenesis gauntlet/snowball charge blaster. Only works on the left hand.<ref name=":3" /> | *'''Yeti Fister''' - Cryogenesis gauntlet/snowball charge blaster. Only works on the left hand.<ref name=":3" /> | ||
*'''Warp Signal Shooter''' - Destroys anything/everything.<ref name=":3" /> | *'''Warp Signal Shooter''' - Destroys anything/everything.<ref name=":3" /> | ||
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Some people have very little connection to their shards. Look at Leet - his shard actively sabotages him. --> | Some people have very little connection to their shards. Look at Leet - his shard actively sabotages him. --> | ||
==History == | ==History== | ||
===Background=== | ===Background=== | ||
Formed a criminal partnership with Über, performing various videogame-themed crimes. They streamed their activities online, gaining notoriety for being both incompetent and despicable.<ref name=":1">Leet and Über glared at him. Their entire schtick was a video game theme. With every escapade, they picked a different video game or series, designing their costumes and crimes around it. One day it would be Leet in a Mario costume throwing fireballs while Über was dressed up as Bowser, the two of them breaking into a mint to collect ‘coins’. Then a week later, they would have a Grand Theft Auto theme, and they would be driving through the city in a souped up car, ripping off the ABB and beating up hookers. - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2011/10/08 Excerpt] from [[Shell 4.5]]</ref> During this period | Formed a criminal partnership with Über, performing various videogame-themed crimes. They streamed their activities online, gaining notoriety for being both incompetent and despicable.<ref name=":1">Leet and Über glared at him. Their entire schtick was a video game theme. With every escapade, they picked a different video game or series, designing their costumes and crimes around it. One day it would be Leet in a Mario costume throwing fireballs while Über was dressed up as Bowser, the two of them breaking into a mint to collect ‘coins’. Then a week later, they would have a Grand Theft Auto theme, and they would be driving through the city in a souped up car, ripping off the ABB and beating up hookers. - [https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2011/10/08 Excerpt] from [[Shell 4.5]]</ref> During this period, Leet used up many of his potential options trying to figure out his tinker specialty, burning himself out on tinker trees such as biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms. After that, things began going downhill for Leet.<ref>Leet did come up when I was figuring out how tinkers worked, but I think he was an antagonist in the snippets more than a protagonist. Probably a reason why he didn't get an interlude at any point - a lot of the time I went to write interludes, I tapped snippets for details and ideas.<br><br>Keep in mind that Leet is a video game theme tinker. Video games have lots of enemies. So he burned himself out on biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms fairly early on. He wanted to do them, he found it easy (and not a thing a lot of other tinkers do well) and it made sense to him, then it all started going wrong. - [https://www.reddit.com/r/Parahumans/comments/2inm3p/why_didnt_leet_ever_delve_into_wet_tinkering_in/cl3v9w1/ Wildbow on Reddit]</ref> | ||
===Story Start=== | ===Story Start === | ||
Über and Leet ambushed [[The Undersiders]] at the storage facility the teenage villain gang had stashed their money from the [[Battle at the Bank|bank robbery]] in. They were dressed up in Bomberman costumes and revealed that they found and stole the money by following [[Bitch]], capturing her in the process. They engaged the Undersiders in battle, with Über taking them on while Leet threw fake bomb holograms at them. Despite their preparation, they were quickly and brutally dispatched by the Undersiders.<ref name="4.5">[[Shell 4.5]]</ref><ref name=":2">[[Shell 4.6]]</ref> | Über and Leet ambushed the [[The Undersiders|Undersiders]] at the storage facility the teenage villain gang had stashed their money from the [[Battle at the Bank|bank robbery]] in. They were dressed up in Bomberman costumes and revealed that they found and stole the money by following [[Bitch]], capturing her in the process. They engaged the Undersiders in battle, with Über taking them on while Leet threw fake bomb holograms at them. Despite their preparation, they were quickly and brutally dispatched by the Undersiders.<ref name="4.5">[[Shell 4.5]]</ref><ref name=":2">[[Shell 4.6]]</ref> | ||
After their defeat, Bakuda showed up, revealing that she had hired Über and Leet to soften the Undersiders up, which evidently failed. She then initiated the true ambush, signaling for members of the ABB to step out of their hiding places to assist her.<ref name=":2" /> | After their defeat, Bakuda showed up, revealing that she had hired Über and Leet to soften the Undersiders up, which had evidently failed. She then initiated the true ambush, signaling for members of the [[Azn Bad Boys|ABB]] to step out of their hiding places to assist her.<ref name=":2" /> | ||
===Post-Slaughterhouse Nine=== | ===Post-Slaughterhouse Nine === | ||
Über and Leet were contracted by [[Coil]] in his operations to take over the city. During the mayoral debates, Leet participated in the attack that would lead to the faking of Coil's death. During this attack, Über used a heavy metal suit constructed by Leet. Leet's technology would later be used to facilitate Coil's betrayal of Skitter, using a form of teleportation to swap her out with a body double without the other Undersiders noticing. Leet also created the Famine Engine for this purpose, which imitated and overrode Skitter's power, commanding nearby bugs to attack everything around them. | Über and Leet were contracted by [[Coil]] in his operations to take over the city. During the mayoral debates, Leet participated in the attack that would lead to the faking of Coil's death. During this attack, Über used a heavy metal suit constructed by Leet. Leet's technology would later be used to facilitate Coil's betrayal of Skitter, using a form of teleportation to swap her out with a body double without the other Undersiders noticing. Leet also created the Famine Engine for this purpose, which imitated and overrode Skitter's power, commanding nearby bugs to attack everything around them. | ||
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===Post-[[Battle against Echidna|Echidna]]=== | ===Post-[[Battle against Echidna|Echidna]]=== | ||
After the Echidna battle, he left Brockton Bay along with Über and | After the Echidna battle, he left Brockton Bay along with Über and Circus. | ||
===[[Timeskip]]=== | ===[[Timeskip]]=== | ||
The | The newly formed trio briefly passed through Tijuana, Mexico, where they evaded authorities and caused property damage after detonating a device.<ref>Since the opening of the Tijuana PRT, there have been three incidents involving capes; the forcefield labyrinth, a raid by an American gang, and a trio of capes with a video game theme evading authorities and causing some property damage with the detonation of a device. - [https://redd.it/iwrwli Tijuana PRT Struggles, Announces Split], [[PHO Sunday]]</ref> They eventually traveled to South America and tried to stay under the radar. However, after getting into trouble and crossing the wrong people, Leet was killed.<ref>'''Quest Premise:''' In South America, Über, Circus and Leet are making their way through the city after having left Brockton Bay. It’s a situation as simple as flying under the radar, playing nice, and being cool, calm and efficient, so as not to stir up trouble with the locals.<br /><br />Spoiler: Leet is bad at this.<br /><br />Spoiler: Things get worse when his luggage is looted, and his laptop with notes on what inventions are mostly okay for him to make is taken, along with the reality hacker.<br /><br />Spoiler: Leet dies. - [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rTH9KfVmNcGqUiC-vQi_w9TM6muHDpgZ6KAv9hokOhg/edit Leet Quest]</ref> | ||
They traveled to South America and tried to stay under the radar. | |||
Spoiler: Leet is bad at this.<br /><br /> | |||
Spoiler: Things get worse when his luggage is looted, and his laptop with notes on what inventions are mostly okay for him to make is taken, along with the reality hacker.<br /><br /> | |||
Spoiler: Leet dies. - [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rTH9KfVmNcGqUiC-vQi_w9TM6muHDpgZ6KAv9hokOhg/edit Leet Quest]</ref> | |||
===Legacy=== | ===Legacy=== | ||
After his death, Über and Circus would split up. Über became rudderless, eventually getting arrested for attempted murder and put into a secure prison facility.<ref name="28.6e1">[[Quinn Calle|Mr. Calle]] answered for [[Glenn Chambers|Glenn]]. “Attempted murder. Bit of a loose cannon, but not so loose they’d stick him in the Birdcage. Shacked up with Circus for a while, but it didn’t take. Relationship-wise or as a partnership. They stood to lose more than they could ever gain if he got loose again, so they made it a secure facility. He hasn’t escaped.” -[https://parahumans.wordpress.com/2013/09/14 Excerpt] from [[Cockroaches 28.6]]</ref> | |||
==Chapter Appearances== | ==Chapter Appearances== | ||
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==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*The name Leet is a reference to [[Wikipedia:Leet|leetspeak]], a system of spelling and grammar commonly used in gaming communities. The word Leet in particular is an alternative spelling for "elite." | *The name Leet is a reference to [[Wikipedia:Leet|leetspeak]], a system of spelling and grammar commonly used in gaming communities. The word Leet in particular is an alternative spelling for "elite." | ||
**Clones of Leet created by [[Echidna]] are given the name [[Pwn]]. In leetspeak, the term pwn is a variation on own. It means "to utterly defeat (an opponent or rival)." | **Clones of Leet created by [[Echidna]] are given the name [[Pwn]]. In leetspeak, the term pwn is a variation on own. It means "to utterly defeat (an opponent or rival)." | ||
*Though Leet is often referred to by fans as "L33t," this spelling does not occur anywhere in the text of Worm.<ref>[https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22l33t%22%20site%3Aparahumans.wordpress.com Proof that 'L33t' does not appear in Worm]</ref> | *Though Leet is often referred to by fans as "L33t," this spelling does not occur anywhere in the text of Worm.<ref>[https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22l33t%22%20site%3Aparahumans.wordpress.com Proof that 'L33t' does not appear in Worm]</ref> | ||
*Leet | *Leet was one of the earliest tinkers to show up in Wildbow's drafts. He primarily appeared as an antagonist.<ref name="dev">Leet did come up when I was figuring out how tinkers worked, but I think he was an antagonist in the snippets more than a protagonist. Probably a reason why he didn't get an interlude at any point - a lot of the time I went to write interludes, I tapped snippets for details and ideas.<br><br>Keep in mind that Leet is a video game theme tinker. Video games have lots of enemies. So he burned himself out on biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms fairly early on. He wanted to do them, he found it easy (and not a thing a lot of other tinkers do well) and it made sense to him, then it all started going wrong. - [https://redd.it/2inm3p Wildbow on Reddit]</ref> | ||
*Wildbow had plans to write a "Quest" centered around Leet, which would feature his adventures and eventual death in South America. It was never written, though an outline of Leet Quest can be found [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rTH9KfVmNcGqUiC-vQi_w9TM6muHDpgZ6KAv9hokOhg/edit here]. | * Wildbow had plans to write a "Quest" centered around Leet, which would feature his adventures and eventual death in South America. It was never written, though an outline of Leet Quest can be found [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rTH9KfVmNcGqUiC-vQi_w9TM6muHDpgZ6KAv9hokOhg/edit here]. | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
Revision as of 23:28, January 11, 2021
<infobox> <title source="name"><default>Leet</default></title>
<image source="Image"></image> <image source="image"></image> <group><header>Basic Information</header> <label>Civilian Name</label> <label>Aliases</label> <label>Gender</label><default>Unknown</default> <label>Death</label> <label>Age</label><default>Unknown</default> <label>Post-timeskip</label> <label>Ward start</label> <label>Relations</label> <label>Family</label></group> <group><header>Professional Status</header> <label>Occupation</label> <label>Classification</label> <label>Unique Features</label> <label>Alignment</label>
<label>Status</label><format><label>Location</label> <label>Teams</label> <label>Previous Team(s)</label> <label>Base of Operations</label></group> <group><header>First Appearance</header> <label>Worm Debut</label> <label>Ward Debut</label></group> </infobox> Leet is a supervillain who is part of a videogame-themed duo with Über.<ref name="Cast2">Über and Leet (Missing) – A thinker with the ability to be a master at anything he tries, and a tinker with the ability to build anything, the two only barely managed to be b-list supervillains with a video game theme. - Cast (in depth)</ref>
Personality
Both Über and Leet are demonstrated to be despicable human beings, having no problems with beating prostitutes on the street to gain online viewers.<ref name=":1" /> Leet himself owns several t-shirts that are deliberately shocking, examples being one mocking Endbringer victims and another depicting obscene sexual imagery.<ref name=":3">Leet Quest</ref>
Ostensibly, Leet is a fan of videogames. He and Über made it a "mission" to spread the artform of videogames.<ref>“Our mission is worth it,” Leet raised his chin – inasmuch as he had one – a notch.
“Right,” Tattletale said, “Spreading the word about the noble and underrated art form that is video games. That's from your website, word for word. People don't watch your show because they think you're righteous. They watch because you're so lame it's funny.” - Excerpt from Shell 4.6</ref>
Appearance
Leet is described as scrawny, with a weak chin and a bad slouch.<ref>Other than their costumes, though, they couldn’t have been more different. One of the figures was scrawny, with a weak chin and a bad slouch. The other had a sculpted physique, broad shouldered and tall, the lines of his muscles clearly visible through his skintight costume. - Excerpt from Shell 4.5</ref> His voice isn't particularly deep, causing him to sound like he's screeching when he yells.<ref>“Shut up!” Leet roared. Except he didn’t have a very deep voice, so it was probably closer to a screech. - Excerpt from Shell 4.6</ref> In his villain persona, he's usually dressed in a costume based around a video game theme. This theme normally matches with Über's costume.<ref name=":1" />
Abilities and Powers
Leet is a tinker whose power allows him to create anything with the drawback of only being able to create it once. He essentially has access to all tinker technology trees, being able to create most things a tinker would be able to specialize in. However, the closer that what he makes is to something he's created before, the higher the chances of a spectacular misfire or failure. By the time that Leet figured this out, he had burned many bridges during his experimentation, limiting his options and leading him to fail very often. This led to him becoming a laughingstock among other parahumans, though his technology could still be quite versatile when working correctly.<ref name="cast2">Über and Leet (Missing) – A thinker with the ability to be a master at anything he tries, and a tinker with the ability to build anything, the two only barely managed to be b-list supervillains with a video game theme. Disappeared after working with Coil. - Cast Page (In Depth)</ref><ref name=":0">Leet's biggest problem is that it took him time to figure out the 'rule' to his power. He tried a variety of things in attempts to work out what his specialty was, and he burned a lot of bridges. That's not a 'Leet' problem so much as a trap that a lot of people (including many here) would fall into. Word of God - he caught on faster than your average geek might.
Now, any time he sits down for a project, he has to cross-check against all the other things he ever made. This isn't end-product related, but works out to components. Example? Power source. He either uses something mundane, or he uses something tinker derived. But if he uses something tinker derived to power his newest project, then he has to think of all the other power sources he's used, make sure that this one is sufficiently different, gauge the risk, and then move forward. Same goes for the mechanisms, the overall design & goal, and so on.
Defiant has the 'tinker up efficiency/hybrid/minimized technology' skill tree. Stinger has the 'missile' skill tree. Tecton has the 'Seismic and Architecture' skill trees. Leet has all of them, but all throughout those trees are entire sections with 'Use of this technology has a X% chance to fail'. You get further away from one design, that chance drops, but it's still there.
The video game thing was partially personal passion and partially a means of 'categorizing' what he did. On top of a wealth of notes and reference documents, he can think back through the various games he's been inspired by and use that as a mnemonic device to recall what he did for each project.
So by the time you/he figure(s) out the 'catch' to the power, the list of options is riddled with fail chances. You know there are a few trees you've not explored yet, but you have to progress carefully. How? You weigh the odds, estimate your chances of failure, trust your one really reliable buddy/sidekick to cover your ass if something blows up, and you do lots of little jobs you can afford to fail until you have the resources to do one big job well with something you're ninety-five percent sure won't blow up in your face.
Except he can't really seem to catch a break. He doesn't know it, but he's basically doing the opposite of Jack Slash and Taylor. He's explicitly out of tune with his power, he doesn't nurture it the way others do, even by general conflict - he's a little too cowardly, a little too safe, in large part, because he's hedging bets as often as not, and it's an unsatisfied shard, more prone to cause chaos for him rather than set him up to pursue it. It's trying to actively disrupt or kill its host so it can move on to greener pastures.
To top it all off, yeah, he's annoying, generally unpleasant, and people don't tend to like him. Except for Über. Such is the life of Leet. - Wildbow on Spacebattles</ref>
Behind the scenes, Leet's shard is actually working against him. His tendency to play it safe with his power puts him completely out of tune with his shard, causing it to punish him by being harsher with its restrictions and making his power malfunction. In essence, it is actively trying to kill Leet so that it can move on to another host.<ref name=":0" />
| Tinker Creations | |
No. I could sense the movements of the bugs throughout my range, even if I couldn’t control them. They were moving in a massive, slow spiral, drifting counterclockwise and attacking anyone they came in contact with, and the center of the effect, where they were settling and gathering in piles? A box in the center of one building. - Excerpt from Monarch 16.12</ref><ref name="FE">"When you went to convince the Mayor of our way of thinking, Trickster carried the devices Leet designed to record the particular signals you use to command your bugs.”
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History
Background
Formed a criminal partnership with Über, performing various videogame-themed crimes. They streamed their activities online, gaining notoriety for being both incompetent and despicable.<ref name=":1">Leet and Über glared at him. Their entire schtick was a video game theme. With every escapade, they picked a different video game or series, designing their costumes and crimes around it. One day it would be Leet in a Mario costume throwing fireballs while Über was dressed up as Bowser, the two of them breaking into a mint to collect ‘coins’. Then a week later, they would have a Grand Theft Auto theme, and they would be driving through the city in a souped up car, ripping off the ABB and beating up hookers. - Excerpt from Shell 4.5</ref> During this period, Leet used up many of his potential options trying to figure out his tinker specialty, burning himself out on tinker trees such as biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms. After that, things began going downhill for Leet.<ref>Leet did come up when I was figuring out how tinkers worked, but I think he was an antagonist in the snippets more than a protagonist. Probably a reason why he didn't get an interlude at any point - a lot of the time I went to write interludes, I tapped snippets for details and ideas.
Keep in mind that Leet is a video game theme tinker. Video games have lots of enemies. So he burned himself out on biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms fairly early on. He wanted to do them, he found it easy (and not a thing a lot of other tinkers do well) and it made sense to him, then it all started going wrong. - Wildbow on Reddit</ref>
Story Start
Über and Leet ambushed the Undersiders at the storage facility the teenage villain gang had stashed their money from the bank robbery in. They were dressed up in Bomberman costumes and revealed that they found and stole the money by following Bitch, capturing her in the process. They engaged the Undersiders in battle, with Über taking them on while Leet threw fake bomb holograms at them. Despite their preparation, they were quickly and brutally dispatched by the Undersiders.<ref name="4.5">Shell 4.5</ref><ref name=":2">Shell 4.6</ref>
After their defeat, Bakuda showed up, revealing that she had hired Über and Leet to soften the Undersiders up, which had evidently failed. She then initiated the true ambush, signaling for members of the ABB to step out of their hiding places to assist her.<ref name=":2" />
Post-Slaughterhouse Nine
Über and Leet were contracted by Coil in his operations to take over the city. During the mayoral debates, Leet participated in the attack that would lead to the faking of Coil's death. During this attack, Über used a heavy metal suit constructed by Leet. Leet's technology would later be used to facilitate Coil's betrayal of Skitter, using a form of teleportation to swap her out with a body double without the other Undersiders noticing. Leet also created the Famine Engine for this purpose, which imitated and overrode Skitter's power, commanding nearby bugs to attack everything around them.
After Coil's death, Leet was captured by Echidna along with Über and Circus during her search for independent capes. Echidna would go on to create multiple clones of all three of them. Later in the battle, the real Leet escaped in one of Echidna's vomit streams.<ref>A dozen bodies began climbing free of the vomit. Ten or so clones had been deposited on the street, along with a real Leet in civilian clothes. One of the clones was a Circus, folding herself into her pocket dimension. - Excerpt from Queen 18.8</ref>
Post-Echidna
After the Echidna battle, he left Brockton Bay along with Über and Circus.
Timeskip
The newly formed trio briefly passed through Tijuana, Mexico, where they evaded authorities and caused property damage after detonating a device.<ref>Since the opening of the Tijuana PRT, there have been three incidents involving capes; the forcefield labyrinth, a raid by an American gang, and a trio of capes with a video game theme evading authorities and causing some property damage with the detonation of a device. - Tijuana PRT Struggles, Announces Split, PHO Sunday</ref> They eventually traveled to South America and tried to stay under the radar. However, after getting into trouble and crossing the wrong people, Leet was killed.<ref>Quest Premise: In South America, Über, Circus and Leet are making their way through the city after having left Brockton Bay. It’s a situation as simple as flying under the radar, playing nice, and being cool, calm and efficient, so as not to stir up trouble with the locals.
Spoiler: Leet is bad at this.
Spoiler: Things get worse when his luggage is looted, and his laptop with notes on what inventions are mostly okay for him to make is taken, along with the reality hacker.
Spoiler: Leet dies. - Leet Quest</ref>
Legacy
After his death, Über and Circus would split up. Über became rudderless, eventually getting arrested for attempted murder and put into a secure prison facility.<ref name="28.6e1">Mr. Calle answered for Glenn. “Attempted murder. Bit of a loose cannon, but not so loose they’d stick him in the Birdcage. Shacked up with Circus for a while, but it didn’t take. Relationship-wise or as a partnership. They stood to lose more than they could ever gain if he got loose again, so they made it a secure facility. He hasn’t escaped.” -Excerpt from Cockroaches 28.6</ref>
Chapter Appearances
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Trivia
- The name Leet is a reference to leetspeak, a system of spelling and grammar commonly used in gaming communities. The word Leet in particular is an alternative spelling for "elite."
- Though Leet is often referred to by fans as "L33t," this spelling does not occur anywhere in the text of Worm.<ref>Proof that 'L33t' does not appear in Worm</ref>
- Leet was one of the earliest tinkers to show up in Wildbow's drafts. He primarily appeared as an antagonist.<ref name="dev">Leet did come up when I was figuring out how tinkers worked, but I think he was an antagonist in the snippets more than a protagonist. Probably a reason why he didn't get an interlude at any point - a lot of the time I went to write interludes, I tapped snippets for details and ideas.
Keep in mind that Leet is a video game theme tinker. Video games have lots of enemies. So he burned himself out on biotinkering, robotics, and hard light holograms fairly early on. He wanted to do them, he found it easy (and not a thing a lot of other tinkers do well) and it made sense to him, then it all started going wrong. - Wildbow on Reddit</ref> - Wildbow had plans to write a "Quest" centered around Leet, which would feature his adventures and eventual death in South America. It was never written, though an outline of Leet Quest can be found here.
References
<references/>
| Leader | Coil {{#switch: deceased | deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • Tattletale | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Members | Dinah Alcott {{#switch: former | deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • Chariot • Creep • Leah • Pitter • Trainwreck {{#switch: deceased |
deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • The Travelers {{#switch: former |
deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • The Undersiders | |||||
| Associates | Accord {{#switch: deceased | deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • Circus {{#switch: former |
deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • Faultline’s Crew • Leet {{#switch: former |
deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} • Über {{#switch: former |
deceased=† | noncanon=≠ | former=‡ | unknown=* | #DEFAULT=
}} |