Forgiven, but Not Forgotten: In the "Once Upon A Time." chapter, Jennifer pities the other children and acknowledges that they were experiencing just as much emotional turmoil as her.Forced into Evil: Jennifer is told in the beginning of the game that the Princess of the Red Rose will kill her if she disobeys orders, right before she sees the princess' minions kill someone else.Expository Hairstyle Change: The clearest difference between Jennifer's young and elder self is her hairstyle: the former's is short presumably because Gregory cut it, the latter's is long and bound up.The entire game leads up to Jennifer realizing that she does in fact, have standards that nothing she's goes through will ever break. Unfortunately, the latter is what Wendy's trying to force her to do. Everyone Has Standards: Jennifer will do anything the club orders her to do… except abandon Brown.In this regard, she can be viewed as a strong character. However, her ability to endure constant bullying and punishment shows her to be very determined and loyal. Jennifer is a timid, fair, soft-spoken young English woman who seems weak and is easily pushed about by others - although this is understandable considering the situation she was forced into. English Rose: Jennifer presents the intriguing concept of a classic English Rose forced into a Resident Evil-style survival horror environment.At this point, Jennifer's personality sort of wraps back around into total fearlessness: she's been through the worst life has to offer long enough to know it can't corrupt her. The dog she befriends is tortured to death. The orphanage that took Jennifer in was a den of bullies presided over by a pedophile. The girl who saved her from him was an obsessed sociopath. The guy who consequently found her was delusional. Doom Magnet: The airship Jennifer was onboard crashed, killing her parents.Due to the Dead: One of the main reasons Jennifer explores her repressed memories is because if she doesn't remember all those who died in the orphanage massacre, nobody will.Designated Victim: What a poor, lonely, unlucky girl.(Though it takes some time before even she realizes that last part.) Nothing breaks her spirit - not being kidnapped, not the deaths of multiple loved ones, and not even the physical and emotional abuse her peers constantly subjected her to. Determinator: Eventually shows herself to be one, despite her young age.Both shades are so dull that they look the same at first glance. Curtains Match the Window: She has pea-green eyes and dirty blonde hair.My beliefs and the will to stand up for them… I don't want to lose those ever again." But the most important thing I learned… was the lesson I received in exchange for my dear friend's life. The alphabet… words… how to clean and do laundry. Coming of Age Story: "I learned many things at this orphanage.See, Hoffman vents his frustration by sexually abusing Diana, who vents her resulting fear by socially abusing Meg, who vents her resulting anger on Jennifer… who is basically the only character who uses constructive coping methods. The Chain of Harm: She's at the bottom of one. ![]() Break the Cutie: A good majority of the game has people (and monsters) doing this to Jennifer.All of the Other Reindeer: Everyone's so mean to Jennifer, even the adults.And Your Reward Is Clothes: If you unlock the four-leaf clover door, you get to dress Jennifer up in a variety of outfits, such as a French maid or an octopus.Amnesiac Hero: Her primary goal is to remember the promise she made to "her dear friend." Turns out there's a lot more than that that Jennifer has forgotten.Accomplice by Inaction: She blames herself for Brown's murder because it might not have happened had she stood up to her bullies (earlier).The protagonist, who returns to the orphanage when she's 19.
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