I'm not the best with words but I'll do my best to try and explain myself,
@Tempera .
Nemona just feels kind of... off. Like, we just saw Nemona have a battle where she just straight up tells her opponent. "Hey, you'd have more fun if you weren't holding back!" And then in this sidestory we instead have someone calling Nemona out for holding back.
This is actually canon!
Nemona has a conversation about it in the postgame, the first time she invites you over to her dorm room. In that conversation, she says;
Nemona: "Ta-ta-tachán! Welcome to the Zona Nemona!"
Scarlet: "It's so tidy!/It's very you!
Nemona: "Aw, thank— Wait a sec... I know we've been to YOUR room before...But have I never had you over here? Wild!"
"Anyway, uh... Listen, Scarlet. You know how I, well...You know how I really like Pokémon battles? Like, really, REALLY like 'em?"
Scarlet: "Yeah, you sure do/I noticed."
Nemona: "Cool. And yeah, you know how when you really like something, you dive in deep? That's what I did with Pokémon battles, and I... just kinda became a Champion? But then I found out that's pretty special—that normally, it's not so simple for most people. People would tell me to my face that I'd only managed it 'cause I have some innate gift, or 'cause I was raised differently, or whatever. And suddenly I started to feel like there was this invisible wall between me and everyone else. So I started going easy when I'd battle my friends. I just wanted everyone to have fun."
Nemona: "Oh, but don't worry, I'm not doing that anymore! I'm going 100-percent all out! Especially since I'm lucky enough to have an opponent around who can beat me even when I'm in full hard-core mode! So just promise me one thing, OK, Scarlet? Promise you'll always stay my equal! You and me, true rivals!"
It's the brunt of where Nemona's character canonically ends up going. Her battling prowess ends up alienating her from her peers, and in an attempt to relieve that a bit, she starts taking it easier on everyone. That's an issue that only resolves itself through Scarlet/Violet, where her rivalry with Scarlet kickstarts her passion again and has her back to her vibrant herself from practically the instant they meet.
Is it ironic, given what she said to Katy? Yeah, actually. It's a very fun kind of irony; Nemona was able to spot the issues when it applied to Katy, but had a blind spot when it came to herself. She fell into the exact same trap that Katy fell into without realizing it.
You can see it happening in the quest already. Mary is already doing this to Nemona. She's treating Nemona like Nemona is something special, like she's got loads more talent than the others do, like Nemona is the mark by which she needs to measure herself.
So, yeah, I took that and ran with it a bit to end up putting Nemona in her canonical pre-canon state at the start of the interlude. By the end, you can see she's already shaken herself out of that funk thanks to finding herself someone who she can go all-out against and still feel like both of them are having fun with the fight.
Maybe I missed the mark in how I portrayed it, but the dissonance
is deliberate.
Clavell being secretly gay. My mind is just, like, why? What did that add to a story focused on Nemona? Also, isn't he a champion class trainer? I could have sworn he was. So, for him to not even be at the 8th badge level seemed odd. Unless I'm misremembered, then your free to ignore this point.
The primary mandate: Nobody associated with Class VII is allowed to be straight. That's just how it is.
Less glibly, it's not about focusing Clavell's character around being
gay, per se. It's about giving Clavell a relationship- romantic or otherwise, though I did tilt the scales towards reading it as romantic, yes- that was shut down prematurely when that person went into Area Zero.
The primary reason for that is to look at the Team Star plotline. It's fairly unlikely that the canon state of that plotline, with all information about them being lost and Clavell having to go directly to the source to find out details of the incident, will happen. Thus, what motivation does Scarlet and Clavell have to go down that plotline?
With the altered motivations both of them have of 'finding out what's going on in Area Zero', the answer is they can directly trade their help with disbanding Team Star in exchange for Cassiopeia digging up information on the place.
Was it necessary? Probably not, but I had a lot of fun digging in to how the canon start might look like in the Tera Steel universe. And when I'm spending thirty-odd hours writing something for someone else's quest, I want it to be fun, you know?
Scarlet.... Honestly, your portrayal of Scarlet just didn't click with me at all. From her abrasive personality, to her being a secret treasure hunter because her mom is working two jobs to try and pay for her scholarship, to her having personal stakes for investigating Area Zero. It all just kind of rubbed me the wrong way, for some reason.
I won't try and convince you to like the character. How you feel is how you feel, and personal feelings are valid.
I
did pick and choose bits of her personality from the combination of the games themselves, Yaosabi's Biri-Biri video, and the Adventures manga, so there's a lot of different parts to her. Not everyone will like her, and that's fine. If she rubs you the wrong way, then disliking her is fine.
I just think it's nice to explain the problems people have with it. I'm not a perfect writer by any means, so I do recognize there can be significant issues in what I write; I'd just like those issues laid out so I can look at them and see if they're things I can fix in future writing. In this case, I think they're deliberate stylistic choices I'm not interested in walking back, but I appreciate that you spent the time to try and describe your issues with it nonetheless.