Clark Kent

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This is the Earth 1 version of Kal-El. You can check the Superman disambiguation page for more information.

Character.png

Full Name:
Kal-El, Clark J. Kent
AKA:
Superman
Position:
The Man of Steel
Age:
Adult
Species:
Type:
World:
Music:
Quote-open.png Krypton bred me, but it was Earth that gave me all I am, all that matters.
It was Krypton that made me Superman... but it is the Earth that makes me human!
Quote-close.png
— Himself
The world knows Superman as The Man of Steel, hero of Metropolis, the United States, and the World. He stands as a symbol of hope and an emblem of truth, justice, and a highly idealized version of what one might call the American Way: liberty and equality for all.

Still well-known but less famous is Clark Kent: a farm boy from Kansas who grew up to attain modest fame as a writer and journalist, primarily attached to the Daily Planet but also frequently featured online and on television.

Hypertime

As noted in his "A Superman for All Seasons" advantage on his character sheet, there are a number of different Kal-Els on Earth from across Hypertime. To contribute in different ways to the game and explore a few different versions of the character, Superman's player has obtained staff permission to run different versions of the character from the aforementioned advantage. The different Hypertime variant Kal-Els being played will be depicted as different character forms, viewable under different forms. The story and information behind each form will be explained in entries linked below. Please contact Clark's player with any questions! The currently active alternate Kal-Els associated with Clark, OOC, are currently:

Personality

Clark is in many ways an all-American boy who grew up and became one of those most dangerous of things: an idealist. He was a boy scout growing up, but he was also a kid who hung out at the arcade and ate pizza. He worked hard on the farm, earned good grades, and performed admirably on the athletic teams (until he had to quit) but his favorite album is still And Justice for All by Metallica. There is a popular perception of Clark that he comes from some sort of 1950s time capsule, but in Clark's case the wholesome upbringing wasn't a false front, and he wasn't raised to quietly accept injustice. The Kents were quite progressive in as many ways as they were traditional, and they raised a son who is a genuinely good-hearted person, but Clark is also a man of boundless curiosity, consumed by the same fundamental questions that fuel the human race: Who are we? Where have we come from? What is our place in the Universe?

Then there's that other bit, the Spider-Man axiom: "With great power comes great responsibility," and when one lives in a veritable world of cardboard that balance exists on a knife's edge. Clark is deeply attuned, particularly thanks to his senses, to the world around him, and he believes without question that he has to do everything within his power to make that world a better place, to help others, to justify the way he uses his gifts. He also has to constantly hold himself back, keep from letting loose, and measure each moment. Will he abandon one responsibility to help someone in need? When is helping others doing too much, preventing them from standing on their own? Every question and criticism that is levied at Superman is one that Clark has wrestled with privately, and he continues to do so. While very traditional in some ways, Clark Kent is no blithe do-gooder from a bygone era. He is a critically aware, deeply thoughtful man who wants to do all he can to help others.

Background

The man who thinks of himself as Clark Joseph Kent was conceived and born as Kal-El on a distant world, Krypton, to Jor-El and Lara. Like Moses in the tales of old, he was placed into an interstellar basket in the form of an experimental spacecraft and cast upon a river of the cosmos, carried by sophisticated computer program and telemetry to the planet Earth, where Jor-El had calculated that his son would have the best chance at a good life. And a good life is exactly what the boy had.

Clark Kent grew up a healthy boy, strong and free from childhood ailments. His parents instilled in him a deep and abiding sense of morality: truth, justice, and compassion. Clark was a good kid, but he was also a kid. He got in occasional trouble, and he learned life lessons like kids tend to do. As he became a teen, he worked for his parents on the farm and held down part-time jobs to pay for things. He worked on cars, did well in school, and excelled at sports. He had a happy childhood and a very healthy adolescence.

This all changed with The Talk. There had been a series of odd incidents: strange headaches that left Clark convinced he had seen through solid objects, an "impossibly" strong showing when he tried out for the varsity football team, and even a couple of truly bizarre incidents involving the spontaneous combustion of a woodworking project and a copy of Catcher in the Rye. As these events became too many to ignore, Jonathan sat Clark down and explained the truth of his mysterious crash-landing amongst the cornstalk's of the Kents' back forty. Jonathan showed Clark the spacecraft that had brought him to Earth. And so began the process of struggling with and eventually accepting his identity.

After finishing high school, Clark had discovered most of his powers. Led by a crystalline device from his spacecraft, he found his way to the Arctic Circle, where the device constructed a place for his education to continue. Holographic artificial recreations of his Kryptonian parents taught Clark of his people, his powers, and his heritage, and in time Clark came to accept these and master his powers. He traveled the world for year or two, always returning to the "Fortress of Solitude," as he called it, and eventually decided on a career in journalism, which he'd already been considering while in high school. After graduation, he impressed a number of industry notables with his body of work, having built up quite an extensive online portfolio of work, and so he found himself with a job at one of the last great metropolitan newspapers, The Daily Planet.

Superman debuted soon after, and over the years since Superman has become a household name, an icon, a living simple of hope in an age of mythical gods and heroes who walk among mortal humankind.