Post by Hiko on Feb 4, 2012 13:26:57 GMT -5
NAME: Momoko [Serial No. 158DA54]
PHYSICAL AGE: 10 Years
SERIES: Chobits
HOME WORLD: Earth [Japan]
ABILITIES AND SPECIAL SKILLS: Momoko can connect via USB 2.0 and S-Video cables, and has wireless capabilities (if a wireless netword card is installed).
APPEARANCE: Momoko is tall, with peach-colored hair, light pink eyes, and lightly-colored casing. Her frame is surprisingly slender for the CPU she holds within, and her former owners had the tendency to dress her in casual, light fabrics as she tends to overheat.
PERSONALITY: Momoko is a softspoken machine, and the internal fans within tend to drown her out when she gets close to overheating. She is a friendly enough persocom, and seems to like the company of children. She attaches very quickly to a new owner, and is aware enough to miss former masters when they leave. For Momoko, an owner is “Master,” regardless of the gender.
HISTORY: Momoko was a custom-built rig, straight out of the pocket of a young college student with a penchant for Japanese names. The young American burned through most of his school loans to build Momo, and eventually spent all of his time with the machine, rather than in class or at work.
When Master Paul was finally put on academic probation, his parents demanded he sell his creation before moving back home and transferring to a community college in hopes that his grades would improve.
From her first master, Momoko was sold to a collector of custom-PCs in South Korea. Used then for heavy gaming, Momoko's hardware quickly ran down. When Master Ae Sook refused to spend money on repairing Momo's aging machinery, the persocom was sold once more, this time to an older couple in Japan.
Momoko renewed life as a maid to the elderly pair, as well as a temporary PC for their grandchildren. When Master Hideyoshi died, Momoko became a full-time maid for Master Yuuka. When the old woman passed on, the estate – including Momoko herself – was auctioned off. As the persocom was considered obsolete by that point, she was not sold. Instead, she and other “useless” items were sent to salvage lot in southern Tokyo.
She has remained there for the past year, waiting to serve once more.