Captain of the FSS-CH9, Amaya Solace is the daughter of a high-ranking admiral from the Felinius Kingdom and the youngest person ever appointed captain of a Felinoid Smartship. Hard-nosed and tough as nails, she constantly struggles to prove herself and her team among the Squadron forces, many of whom assume she received her post through nepotism. Despite the general mistrust of her throughout the squadron, she has a reputation for being a fierce fighter, albeit with a history of insubordination and inability to follow orders. Prior to her commission as captain, she served with the CH-13. Extended Bio
Major Kennedy is the commander of IJA-µ. He is a charming, goodlooking and notorious womanizer. He is confident and egotistical to the point that it tends to interfere with his military duties, however, the unit is effective enough that for the most part the Squadron gives him lattitude. Kennedy is also somewhat chauvinistic and tends to overlook the accomplishments and abilities of female officers, preferring instead to flirt with them. The other members of the IJA-µ tend to disregard Kennedy’s command status, however he is generally too self-involved to notice.
Of all the crew of the FSS-CH9, Sarah probably wants to be there the least. A brilliant scientist and leading authority on rocket science and physics, her intelligence and technical ability are rivaled only by her libido and hedonistic nature. Born a flower child to hippie parents, she finds herself constantly torn between the worlds of free-love and semi-conductor mechanics. While she is well respected in her field and throughout the Kingdom for her brilliance, her carefree attitude and lack of discretion landed her a court martial and got her “sentenced” to active duty with the Hellcats. While she loves her crewmates, she’d greatly prefer life on firm land to the isolation of deep space. Extended Bio
For those who haven’t read the first issue of the print version of Cosmic Hellcats, you’ll note that Sui’ggiy uses the insult “insolent whelp” but he tries really hard to come up with something else. Insolent Whelp is the only insult Rigellians know.
And you’d know that if you had the comic. Which you should I mean hey, it’s only 5 bucks. We’re poor starving artists here. Help us out.
FWIW, in response to Mav’s request for feedback, I like the “move the plot along” episodes better than the “funny” episodes. Newspaper serial comics have to repeat the same plot point seven times in case someone misses it, but you guys don’t! Of the past four or five episodes, one was a 4th of July special, and the others have all basically been the same sex joke. It’s not even really funny, since the sex-kitten thing is an established character point already. It’s like when the Joker makes a terrible pun: the writer isn’t going to get a laugh, but he has to do it because that’s who the Joker is. (But the Joker’s pun only takes up a frame and then we get to move on to the next BIF! or POW!)
For those who haven’t read the first issue of the print version of Cosmic Hellcats, you’ll note that Sui’ggiy uses the insult “insolent whelp” but he tries really hard to come up with something else. Insolent Whelp is the only insult Rigellians know.
And you’d know that if you had the comic. Which you should I mean hey, it’s only 5 bucks. We’re poor starving artists here. Help us out.
FWIW, in response to Mav’s request for feedback, I like the “move the plot along” episodes better than the “funny” episodes. Newspaper serial comics have to repeat the same plot point seven times in case someone misses it, but you guys don’t! Of the past four or five episodes, one was a 4th of July special, and the others have all basically been the same sex joke. It’s not even really funny, since the sex-kitten thing is an established character point already. It’s like when the Joker makes a terrible pun: the writer isn’t going to get a laugh, but he has to do it because that’s who the Joker is. (But the Joker’s pun only takes up a frame and then we get to move on to the next BIF! or POW!)