Remember the view of the van's sun visor? Those three photos it had? Instead of the Bentley/Penelope photo, we get this...
And at the end of Episode 4, it's replaced with a new photo starring these four as they are now, with Murray picking his brothers and sister up from behind. Cuuuuute!
I'd love to see someone draw that. Have Penelope sandwiched between Sly and Bentley. She is the main protagonist of my fanfiction, after all...
I'm assuming Carmelita takes the picture for them...
I'd draw it myself, but I'm no good at drawing art. Again, I'm just a writer with big ideas.
The other two photos can stay the same.
I know, this one's a bit overdone.
Penelope!
OMG I love her ^_^
Why I like them: Adorkable, nerdy, sweet, smart, kind of witty in her own way
Why I don’t: Does not fight a lot, I understand that her forte is RC gadgets, but she gets in trouble a lot.
Favorite episode: Flight of Fancy, China episode (names escape me) and Dead Men tells no Tales
Favorite season: Spring
Favorite line: “No one touches that turtle, but me…”
Favorite outfit: Her typical yellow sweater and overalls, pirate dress and lab suit in the new game
OTP: With Bentley. Love them 8-ever
Brotp: Hhm, she gets along nicely with the gang, probably Murray, he’s the friendliest :)
Head Canon: Sanest of the couple (i’d imagine Bentley getting too egotistical), stays quiet and acts grumpy once a month. Her last name is “Benneke” (I looked up Dutch last names)
Unpopular opinion: Probably that early after Sly 3’s release, she wasn’t very well liked by the fans back in 2005.
A wish: Not much except her to be back and more involved (does not have to outshine the gang)
An oh-god-please-don’t-ever-happen: Forever disappeared or forgotten or demoted to extra or breaking up with Bentley
5 words to best describe them:
My nickname for them: Penny, Mrs.Wiseturtle X) (let this be canon in the future)
"Because I, along with everyone else I'm sure, hated Penelope's betrayal, I got a better idea: It's Raleigh The Frog as The Black Knight; He kidnapped Penelope and forced her to help him build it, the boss fight is at first pretty hopeless until Penelope appears, having broken free, and tells Sly and the gang where the weak points are and how to break the armor of the Black Knight. What do you think?"
Confessed by: tyler2706
(I think we would take literally anything else at this point. -Mod)
Here's a little tale about how my obsession with Sly Cooper got started... Super abridged, of course.
It actually happened right after my senior year of high school. I found it on the floor in my room one night. I decided to give it a chance...
Cue the beginning of my obsession. This happened during the summer of 2008. Before the storytelling trainwreck that is Thieves In Time ever existed.
Sketch pen request for sugarbot-artpost wants Penelope from Sly Cooper 3 Honor Among thieves!
While I was watching Persona walkthrough I think it was 3 or 4 can’t remember. I saw a random student girl sitting down so cute so it just pop up to my mind and I started sketching Penelope how the girl sit except she doesn’t have glasses or being an anthro haha. It sad there is not many fanarts of her. :/ I find her adorable mechanic mouse girl!
Anyways I remembered I have to finish request from people who requested me few months ago. Sorry for the wait sometimes I need ideas and inspirations that fits the characters perfectly.
More humanized Bentley&Penelope fluff
I LOVE the way the sword pose came out. I don’t even care that I forgot to add glasses to it! XD
quick doodles of them
i miss drawing human penelope mouse so much i l OVE H E R OKAY.… .
I couldn't resist.
Penelope is going to go through a lot in this story. While simultaneously keeping a dark secret of betrayal, she learns to like Sly, Bentley, and Murray all over again.
She ends up having a change of heart, and finally starts to see the boys as her family... only for Le Paradox's reveal at the end of Episode 5 to nearly rip that away from her, and right when their trust in her is at an all time high.
definitions of terms during the writing, editing and publishing process
Acknowledgements: Text in which the author thanks those who’ve supported them.
Action beat: Short description that comes before, between or just after dialogue.
Adjective: A word that describes a noun.
Adverb: A word that describes a verb.
Adverbial phrase: A group of words that describe a verb.
Afterword: A concluding section, often reflecting on the book’s creation or providing additional context.
Anaphora: The deliberate repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of successive clauses for artistic effect.
Antagonist: An adversary. The character who creates obstacles and challenges for the protagonist, or behaves in a hostile fashion towards the protagonist.
Anti-protagonist: A protagonist whose own actions create opposition and conflict, often within themselves or against their own goals.
Apostrophe: A punctuation mark used to indicate possession, omission and, occasionally, a plural.
Appendix: Space in a book for material that doesn’t fit comfortably in the main text.
Asyndeton: Literary device through which a sentence’s structure follows the following pattern: A, B, C.
Back matter: Also end matter. Elements reserved for the back of a book, including appendix, glossary, endnotes, bibliography and index.
Beta reader: Test-reader who provides feedback on book.
Bibliography: List of all works cited in book, and any other work of interest to the reader.
Chapter drop: The space above and below the chapter title.
Character arc: Narrative that shows how a character changes and develops.
Characterization: The process of revealing a character's personality, traits and motives through actions and dialogue.
Colon: Punctuation mark that introduces additional/qualifying information about the clause it follows.
Comma splice: Two independent clauses joined by a comma rather than a conjunction or an alternative punctuation mark.
Conjunction: A word that connects clauses or sentences (e.g. ‘and’, ‘but’, ‘if’, ‘then’)
Copyediting: A review of grammar, punctuation, and spelling, ensuring consistency and accuracy in the manuscript's language.
Critique: Also manuscript evaluation. Report analysing a book’s strengths and weaknesses.
Denouement: The final part of the book in which all the plot strands are brought together and resolved.
Deuteragonist: A sidekick or confidante character who has the most influence on the protagonist, often helping them solve problems and overcome obstacles. Can be critical to driving the plot.
Developmental editing: Also structural editing. The improvement of a manuscript's structure, content, and overall narrative, focusing on big-picture elements. Attends to plot, characterisation, narration and pacing.
Dialogue tag: Also speech tag. Words that indicate which character is speaking (e.g. John said).
Dialogue: The lines characters speak in a book.
Diversity reader: Also sensitivity reader. Test-reader who checks for misrepresentation in books.
Double-page spread: Also DPS. The view of a printed book or PDF when opened so that the left- and right-hand pages are both visible.
Drama: The conflicts, emotional intensity, and impactful events that drive the plot and engage readers emotionally. The focus is on character relationships, motivations, and the consequences of their actions.
Dropped capital: Decorative first letter of the first word on the first line in a chapter. Larger than the rest of the text and drops down two lines or more.
Ellipsis: Punctuation mark that indicates a trailing-off or a pause.
End matter: Also back matter. Elements reserved for the back of a book, including appendix, glossary, endnotes, bibliography and index.
Endnote: Additional useful information at the end of a chapter or book.
Filter word: Verb that tells rather than shows (e.g. ‘noticed’, ‘seemed’, ‘spotted’, ‘saw’).
Folio: Somewhat old-fashioned term for page number. Also used to refer to a page.
Footnote: Additional useful information at the bottom of a page.
Foreword: A recommendation of the work written by someone other than the author.
Fourth wall: In books, the conceptual space between the characters and the readers.
Free indirect speech: Also free indirect style and free indirect discourse. Third-person narrative that holds the essence of first person thought or dialogue.
Front matter: Also prelims. Includes part title and title pages, foreword, preface and acknowledgements.
Full point: Period or full stop.
Full stop: Period or full point.
Glossary: Alphabetical list of important terms with explanations or definitions.
Habitual past tense: Uses ‘would’ or ‘used to’ with a verb to indicate events that happened routinely in a time past.
Half-title page: The first page of a book with any text on it; in a printed book, always a right-hand page. Contains only the main title of the book.
Head-hopping: Jumping from one character’s thoughts and internal experiences to another’s. Indicates viewpoint has been dropped.
Imprint: Publisher’s name.
Independent clause: A group of words that contains a subject and a predicate.
Index: Alphabetical list of all topics, themes, key terms and cited author names covered in the book, and the corresponding page numbers.
Information dump: Also word dump. Information that’s necessary to the story but isn’t artfully delivered, or weaved creatively into the narrative and dialogue.
Line editing: Also stylistic editing. The refining of a manuscript's language, focusing on consistency, clarity, flow and style at sentence level.
Maid-and-butler dialogue: Dialogue in which one character tells another something they already know so the reader can access backstory.
Manuscript evaluation: Also critique. Report analysing a book’s strengths and weaknesses.
Narrative arc: Also story arc. The structure and shape of a story.
Narrative authenticity: The believability and truthfulness of a story so that the characters and events feel real within the framework of the novel’s world.
Narrative distance: Also psychic distance. How close the reader feels to a character’s thoughts, emotions and experiences within a story.
Narrative: Story. The part of the book that’s narrated, excluding the dialogue.
Narrative style: The author's unique manner of storytelling, encompassing language, tone, viewpoint and other structural choices.
Narrative voice: The style, tone, and personality through which a narrator or character tells a story to readers.
Numerals, Arabic: 1, 2, 3 etc.
Numerals, Roman: i, ii, iii etc.
Omniscient: All-knowing. Refers to a viewpoint style in fiction writing.
Overwriting: Using too many words on the page. Often characterized by repetition and redundancy.
Page proofs: A file that’s reached a stage in the publishing process where the text and images of a manuscript have been laid out in their final format.
Pantser: A writer who doesn’t outline or plan story structure, but flies by the seat of their pants.
Period: Full stop or full point.
Perspective character: Also viewpoint character. The character through whose eyes the story is primarily told. The narrative lens through which readers experience events, thoughts, and emotions within the story.
Plot: The sequence of events in a novel.
Point of view: Also viewpoint and POV. Describes whose head we’re in when we read a book, or whose perspective we experience the story from.
Polysyndeton: Literary device through which a sentence’s structure follows the following pattern: A and B and C.
Predicate: The part of a sentence that contains a verb and that tells us something about what the subject’s doing or what they are.
Preface: An explanation of the purpose, scope and content of a book, and written by the author.
Prelims: Also front matter. Includes part title and title pages, foreword, preface and acknowledgements.
Pronoun: A word that replaces a noun (e.g. I, you, he, she, we, me, it, this, that, them those, myself, who, whom). Pronouns can act and be acted upon like any noun.
Proofreading: The final pre-publication quality-control stage of editing where any final literal errors and layout problems are flagged up. Comes after developmental editing, stylistic line editing and copyediting.
Proper noun: A named person, place or organization. Always takes an initial capital letter.
Protagonist: The leading character in a novel, often facing central conflicts and driving action.
Psychic distance: Also narrative distance. How close the reader feels to a character’s thoughts, emotions and experiences within a story.
Purple prose: Overblown, poorly structured writing with strings of extraneous and often multisyllabic adjectives and adverbs.
Quotation mark: Also speech mark. Punctuation that indicates the spoken word. Singles or doubles are acceptable.
Recto: The right-hand page of a book.
References: List of all the works cited in your book.
Roman typeface: Not italic.
Running head: Text that runs across the top of a page (e.g. title of the book, chapter title, author’s name).
Scene: a distinct segment or building block where specific actions and events unfold in a setting.
Scene technique: The use of dialogue, action, setting, and tension to craft compelling moments in the story.
Semi-colon: A punctuation mark that indicates a stronger pause than a comma between two main clauses.
Sensitivity reader: Also diversity reader. Test-reader who checks for misrepresentation in books.
Speech mark: Also quotation mark. Punctuation that indicates the spoken word. Singles or doubles are acceptable.
Speech tag: Also dialogue tag. Words that indicate which character is speaking (e.g. John said).
Story arc: Also narrative arc. The structure and shape of a story.
Structural editing: Also developmental editing. The improvement of a manuscript's structure, content, and overall narrative, focusing on big-picture elements. Attends to plot, characterisation, narration and pacing.
Style sheet: In which an author or editor records stylistic and language preferences, and tracks who’s who, what’s where, and when X, Y and Z happens.
Stylistic editing: Also line editing. The refining of a manuscript's language, focusing on consistency, clarity, flow and style at sentence level.
Subject: The thing in a sentence that’s doing or being something.
Subplot: A secondary storyline that supports and enhances the main plot of a narrative.
Suspense: The tension, uncertainty and anticipation created by withholding information, raising stakes or placing characters in imminent danger. Readers are kept guessing or forced to ask questions.
Syndeton: Literary device through which a sentence’s structure follows the following pattern: A, B and C (or A, B, and C).
Talking-heads syndrome: Dialogue that isn’t grounded in the environment or the characters’ responses to that environment.
Tense: The form a verb takes to indicate when an action happened in relation to the telling of it.
Tension: The emotional strain or suspense created by unresolved conflicts, stakes or uncertainties that keep readers engaged.
Tertiary character: A functional character who gives the story realism and depth, but doesn’t significantly impact on or influence the plot or the development of the other characters.
Theme: The novel’s central idea or message about life, society, or human nature.
Title page: Includes full title (and subtitle if there is one), author’s name, publisher’s name, logo, volume number, and edition.
Transgressor: A character who commits morally, socially, or legally questionable acts.
Tritagonist: Third most important character, who often provide regular emotional or physical support, but don’t determine how the story develops.
Unreliable dialogue: Dialogue that doesn’t match a character’s true voice, mood or intent.
Unreliable narrator: A character whose telling of the story cannot be taken at face value. They may be naïve, confused, or deliberately manipulative.
Verb, intransitive: A verb that doesn’t have a direct object (e.g. ‘I giggled’).
Verb, transitive: A verb that has a direct object (e.g. ‘wrote’ in ‘I wrote a book’).
Verb: A word that describes doing. Can refer to a physical action (e.g. to dig), a mental action (e.g. to wonder) or a state of being (e.g. to be).
Verso: The left-hand page of a book.
Viewpoint: Also point of view or POV. Describes whose head we’re in when we read a book.
Viewpoint character: Also perspective character. The character through whose eyes the story is primarily told, and the narrative lens through which readers experience events, thoughts, and emotions within the story.
Vocative: The form of address for a character directly referred to in dialogue.
Word dump: Also information dump. Information that’s necessary to the story but isn’t artfully delivered, or weaved creatively into the narrative and dialogue.
Source
Bentley = sniping & typing
Murray = punching & munching
Carmelita = tailing & jailing
Sly = thieving………………………. & grieving. :(