This seemed like a topic that would've been really good for the ever so lonely Artrift forums (sigh) I might do it
So I've been thinking about this for a while when thinking back on my content, especially now as I begin to write a piece about current events (which nobody here will see, as per the rules and the norms). I have many OC's and/or works of fiction scattered about even if they're not my specialty. I am what you may see many call set in her ways, albeit in a kind of inclusivist/relativist way. When such a person, right or wrong, writes a work, you can expect it to carry that on each time. And the main characters, by the end of the story, embody this, right? Right?
So as I mentioned, I had been thinking of this question for a while. I have some variance in most characters, like they might have different traditions or habits, but someone asked me about it one day.
"Uh why is your character a Scientologist" they asked? The OC, which was based on a stereotypical Hollywood actor, had it implied in his details, though it reflected little.
"Something wrong with that?"
"So you're a Scientologist?"
"No, never considered it nor wish to."
"So you disagree with despotic doctrine, yet you make a character who follows despotic doctrine?"
"Despotic? Look at his heroism at the end of the story."
"Yeah, but it's still despotic doctrine. Imagine making your hero supporting [that thing that violates Godwin's Law] but then going on a quest and saving the world."
"But that's the stuff of villains."
"And Scientology isn't the stuff of villains?"
"The last guy who critiqued an OC asked me why I 'make them all church-loving islanders' and clearly this has led to an impasse."
Curious, I began looking at many of the OC's others put on the site. How much of a separation is imbued in OC's in your experience? Would they be disagreeable little rebels if they were summoned to life?