Nickname/Aliases: Jenny
Race: Human
Gender: Female
Age: 16
Sexuality: Bisexual
Birthplace: Frebourne
Skills/Talents: Jennifer is a certified genius, literally, she keeps the certificate in her wallet. She has shown remarkable potential in her academic pursuits, especially those involving computers or science. She's also a fairly good director.
Personality:
Jenny is a sarcastic person with a great affinity toward irony. Usually sitting alone with a laptop, she is unlikely to start conversations with others, but she'll be more than happy to participate in them. Jenny rarely talks about herself, instead asking about others, less out of an unwillingness to share, due more to a distaste for reviewing information she already knows. Highly analytical and very intelligent, she loves puzzle-solving, whether it be in a video game, Sudoku, or real people's problems. Jenny detests losing and being wrong, especially at the same time, and depending on the situation, she may not be above circumventing the rules to ensure that that doesn't happen. Sometimes seen as cold, what Jenny lacks is not empathy, but skill in displaying empathy, or any emotion for that matter.
History:
It all started with Jenny learning to speak at a young age. Ever since then she's been learning everything she could as rapidly as possible. Academically she quickly rose above her classmates, while consequently alienating herself from them. Having always gotten along with adults better than she did with her peers, Jennifer is far more comfortable starting a conversation with a teacher than a student. Her family is lower-middle class but her parents do the best they can to provide her with the tools to continue learning, examples being: her laptop or sending her to Atreus Academy, while still looking after her two brothers. She greatly appreciates this, even if her gratitude isn't quite as obvious as she means it to be.
Miscellaneous:
Jennifer hates abstract art, her reasoning for which is: "Because there is no correct interpretation, it is like a puzzle that is impossible to solve."