====== Qingque (Erudition, Quantum) ====== {{:character:qingque-drip.jpg?200 |}} Diviner of the Divination Commission on the Xianzhou Luofu, and a librarian.\\ Always slacks off and is about to be demoted to a "door guardian." ---- ==== Character Details ==== An ordinary diviner at the Divination Commission. She would never slack off in slacking off.\\ Following her parents' wishes, Qingque qualified for the Divination Commission, but the relaxing post she was expecting was in fact a brutal, high-intensity workplace.\\ After several years of work, Qingque has honed her skills — no matter which department she's transferred to, she's still the lowest-leveled diviner.\\ She would browse books and play ancient tile games to wile away the hours... What more could one ask for than a life like this? ---- ==== Character Story: Part I ==== The legend of Qingque begins at the lyceum. From the time of Qingque's freshman year right through to her graduation, whenever exam grades were announced, the word Qingque was always followed by a number written out in full: 60, with no exception. At first, her tutors thought that Qingque was just an average talent unsuitable for academia, so they didn't delve too deeply into things. However, as the same number kept turning up in the examination records, her tutors began to suspect that this wasn't a coincidence at all. Very soon, having long conversations with the tutors became a common occurrence for Qingque. Anyone familiar with this kind of sophistry will recognize that handful of sayings: At first, she's //"quiet and well-behaved,"// or //"gifted."// Then, later on, the tone will shift to blame, //"A pity that big brain of yours is going to waste,"// before the grand finale: //"If only you could dedicate such ingenuity to your studies, then blah blah blah..."// But Qingque knew the kind of life she wanted far better than her tutors do. She kept repeating //"Oh, yes yes yes,"// and //"Mmm, sure sure sure,"// before turning straight around to fall asleep at her desk, and just scraping by during the next exam — this was how Qingque responded to the coercion and threats of her tutors. They finally ran out of patience with her. In the end, they could only leave behind a resentful message in her yearbook: //"It'd be difficult for her to achieve greatness."// ---- ==== Character Story: Part II ==== During the ten-plus years at the Divination Commission, Qingque kept a low-key existence like a harmless little sparrow. Following her parents' expectations and holding down a steady job, Qingque thought she could breathe a sigh of relief. However, she didn't realize that the Divination Commission — which is in charge of gathering, collecting, and sorting information — is an endless sea of misery for slackers, with no end to the effort it demands. This high-intensity work drove Qingque into torment, from which she could not escape. However, as the saying goes, "what doesn't kill you only makes you stronger." Struggling through the endless days of being a lifelong "professional," Qingque became a seasoned slacked and learned more than a few slick tricks to loaf on the job. She's transferred throughout the departments and worked under several bosses. Every time, she's always the lowest-level diviner, with her numbers threatening to go even lower. It can be said that this has been... pleasing. However, there are two things that still trouble her. One is visiting her parents during New Year for an annual catch-up, talking about life and her plans for the future — because she doesn't have any plans at all. The other is that pesky boss of hers who's more accurate than a jade abacus at piling new work on her whenever she's busted slacking off. Qingque is determined to keep improving her time management skills and escape the terror of being pursued by her superior in the Divination Commission. What a shame that Qingque fails to understand fate supersedes her. Her every thought is well within the purview of the omniscia. ---- ==== Character Story: Part III ==== The game of Celestial Jade is supposed to have been around since the days of the Primeval Imperium, but was lost during the Xianzhou Alliance's period of long interstellar drift. Thanks to an anonymous diviner at the Divination Commission, the rules have been collated and brought back to modern-day Xianzhou, where the people are fortunate enough to have access to this mind-boggling tile game based on astrophysics and celestial phenomena. Of course, rules alone are not enough. That's why the diviner used blueprints from her repository as bait to lure in close colleagues from the Artisanship Commission into crafting Celestial Jade tiles plus a board to play on. The auto-shuffling function is integrated into these boards, and quickly began to catch on in the Quatraboard Games Parlor (which is owned by the Artisanship colleague). Nowadays, Celestial Jade is one of the most popular games aboard the Xianzhou Luofu. The diviner would joke about this in letters sometimes with her artisan friend. She'd originally wanted to use this game for nothing more than her own leisure, not to capture the hearts of millions of Xianzhou people. Now that's a completely unintended outcome. //"Well, it's not a bad thing..."\\ "After all... If I can use this leisurely brain game to slack off out in the open, they why not go for it?"// ---- ==== Character Story: Part IV ==== //"Being happy at work is an artform."// //"First, never overdo any task. Higher-ups want to see their tasks progressing at a consistent pace before the deadline, so never turn in anything early."// //"Second, never take the initiative. If higher-ups don't personally tell you what they want you to do, that is not your problem."// //"Third, don't work hard by yourself, and never fight for clout. If you can, try and drag someone in to suffering together with you. Whatever you do, never work alone for the sake of trying to demonstrate any kind of ability."// //"Afterward, you can give credit to your peers, both as an easy hat-tip or simple investment into your future. But also as a shield against the possibility of higher-ups promoting you — a promotion means even more work."// //The point is, there are three basic principles for happiness at work — do not be proactive, do not say no, and do not be responsible. Did you get it?"//