Buttercup: ESFP – The Performerīuttercup is known as the toughest fighter and greatly enjoys any kind of physical activity. In all, she is well-informed, well-read, and enjoys passing on her knowledge to others. She focuses on results and wants to be productive, competent, and influential. Blossom approaches every situation with the attitude of an efficiency analyst and is usually not shy about pointing out things that could be done better and ways for others to improve. She is friendly and outgoing, often good with sizing people and situations up very quickly. She is direct and can sometimes be presumptuous and arrogant. She excels in developing long-range plans to accomplish her vision, complete missions, and set personal goals.īlossom enjoys working with others in pursuit of a goal and getting things done though she does not always pick up on emotional subtleties. Like many ENTJs, she is analytical and objective, swift in seeing inefficiency and theorizing new solutions. She is frank, decisive, articulate, and quick-witted. She is known as the leader, commander, and the book-smart sister and often uses her advanced intelligence to help the people of Townsville. (To take the official professional test yourself, go to THE POWERPUFF GIRLS’ CHARACTERS & PERSONALITIESīlossom is the leader of the Powerpuff Girls, and as such, she knows how to take control of a situation. As usual, if you would like to read the description of the 16 different types in detail you can do so from the Myers-Briggs Foundation. I am going to be using the Myers-Briggs personality types when discussing these characters. RELATED: Typing Fictional Characters – Steven Universeįor now, however, I am going to be focusing on the Utonium family and my personal favorite villain. I may at some point in the future make another article about typing more villains and side characters from this show. This is a show with a very large cast of characters, and each one has something memorable about them. I enjoy the show for its art, humor, how it pokes fun at superhero tropes, and, of course, the characters. I grew up with it and often drew my favorite characters. It is a show that I hold close to my heart. ![]() The Powerpuff Girls is not only colorful with a distinct and easily imitable art style but also has elements that allow the show to appeal to both boys and girls. RELATED: Typing Fictional Characters: Gravity Falls The Powerpuff Girls chronicles the adventures of three little girl superheroes created by Professor Utonium as they work to keep Townsville safe from memorable villains and giant monsters. The show was created by Craig McCracken, who also created Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends and Wander Over Yonder as well as writing and storyboarding for Dexter’s Laboratory. The show has memorable characters with intriguing personalities – so I’ve decided to type them using Myers-Briggs for fun. I recommend this model but just know it’s a bit rough to print.The Powerpuff Girls is an animated television series that aired on Cartoon Network from 1998-2005. Last thing is the tip of the bottom claw has some supports inside that I don’t expect to ever reach when printed the same way as the top but they are so far in there that they have no impact on the usability. It’s a big lrint so if you don’t have an enclosure or hot chamber you’ll want to use PLA. One other note is that I printed in abs in a fully enclosed printer with a chamber temp of 65c. ![]() Printed in abs with some extra perimeters to allow me to sand it since even with supports this will have some rough spots. I lifted the entire piece 1 mm off the bed and let the snug supports in prusa slicer auto support it. I found that the best way was to raise it off the bed entirely and print on a bed of supports as if you rest the point of the curve on the bed itself the supports won’t catch the next few layers and the print will fail. I scaled and printed in the suggested orientation for the claw top. Recommended I won’t lie this is a tough print.
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