Viva Project Character Cards [work] ◉

In classrooms, character cards support reading comprehension and literary analysis. Students who create cards for novel figures must synthesize evidence, infer motivations, and justify interpretations—active skills beneficial for critical thinking and writing. Cards also facilitate peer review: students swap cards to test whether another can write a scene that fits the provided profile, reinforcing text-based reasoning.

Characters like Megumin ( KonoSuba ), Nezuko ( Demon Slayer ), and Kanna ( Dragon Maid ) are popular community creations. Viva Project Character Cards

Best for: Elementary & Special Education Have a set of emotion cards (Sad, Angry, Scared, Confused). Then, draw a . Ask: "How does 'Grumpy Greg' feel today, and why?" Young learners use the character as a proxy to describe their own emotional states. Outcome: Reduces shame around negative emotions. "I am Grumpy Greg today" is a safe, non-disruptive way for a child to express dysregulation. Characters like Megumin ( KonoSuba ), Nezuko (

The Viva Guide does not control the story; they control the pressure . Key rules for facilitators: Ask: "How does 'Grumpy Greg' feel today, and why