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Wed Jan 31st, 2024 @ 8:09pm

Remy Naal

Name Remy Phillippe Naal

Position Civilian: URC Executive


Character Information

Gender Male
Species Human
Age 29

Physical Appearance

Height 6'2'' (187cm)
Weight 185 lbs(83.9km)
Hair Color Dirty Blond
Eye Color Blue
Physical Description Raised in France, Remy has no problem balancing sophistication and charm with rugged good looks. Remy keeps himself in top physical shape with regular exercise and hobbies. Despite growing up a gymnast he has bulked up as he has matured since his early twenties. He keeps his hair cropped short but has adopted a slight scruffy beard since resigning from Starfleet. He has an open face and cheerful smile to match his intelligent eyes.

When involved in formal professional functions he dons smart suits while generally he wears a weathered field jacket with simple clothes and work boots that he wears often while in the field. Despite his simplistic clothing choices due to his work he still manages to have typical French style in his choices.

Family

Spouse N/A
Children N/A
Father Captain Julien Naal; Commanding Officer of USS Madrid
Mother Nicole Dubois; Lawyer
Brother(s) N/A
Sister(s) N/A
Other Family Marcel Dubois, Stepfather; Architect

Personality & Traits

General Overview Remy Naal is a former Starfleet flight officer and current executive within the United Relief Council, known for his warmth, natural charisma, and deeply people-oriented approach to leadership.

Compassionate, intelligent, and personable, Remy tends to build loyalty through sincerity rather than authority. Where his father, Captain Julien Naal, inspires confidence through discipline and command presence, Remy earns trust more naturally through humor, emotional openness, and an ability to connect easily with others.

Though approachable and generally good-natured, Remy is deeply principled and at times frustratingly idealistic. His conviction that meaningful service can exist outside traditional institutions ultimately led him away from Starfleet and into humanitarian work, believing direct involvement often matters more than bureaucracy or politics.

Warm-hearted to a fault, Remy has a tendency to overextend himself and struggles with situations where helping everyone simply is not possible. Though usually patient and easygoing, he can become unexpectedly stubborn when his convictions are challenged and occasionally views difficult issues in frustratingly black-and-white terms.

Though proud of the values Starfleet represents, Remy maintains a complicated relationship with the institution and the legacy of his father, believing service matters most when it remains focused on people rather than systems.
Strengths & Weaknesses +Compassionate and good-natured
+Honorable
+Intelligent
+Charismatic
+Passionate
+Natural leader
+Great sense of humor

-Tends to view the world as black and white
-Proud and at times arrogant
-Fears being in his father's shadow
-Mischievous
-Tries to save everyone
Ambitions To achieve the United Relief Council’s goals of providing aid to civilian colonies without the need of a military presence.
Hobbies & Interests Parkour, freerunning, cooking, Krav Maga, skiing, flying, tennis, Anbo-jyutsu, parrises squares, Earth dance.

Personal History Remy Phillippe Naal was born in Marseille, France in 2358 to Captain Julien Naal and attorney Nicole Dubois. Though the son of a respected Starfleet officer, Remy’s upbringing was, by most standards, remarkably ordinary. Following his parents’ divorce, he spent the majority of his childhood in France with his mother and stepfather, architect Marcel Dubois, growing up in an environment far removed from the structure and expectations of Starfleet life.

Though Julien remained a consistent presence when assignments allowed, Starfleet occupied a complicated place in Remy’s life. It represented service, sacrifice, and purpose, but also distance, absence, and the quiet realities that had gradually worn down his parents’ marriage. Growing up in the shadow of his father’s reputation—particularly following the Dominion War—Remy became acutely aware of both the admiration Julien inspired and the personal cost that accompanied such devotion to duty.

Despite conflicted feelings, the expectation that he would eventually follow his father into Starfleet remained largely unspoken but understood.

Remy entered Starfleet Academy with a natural aptitude for leadership and flight operations, quickly distinguishing himself as charismatic, intelligent, and unusually easy to like. Where Julien inspired confidence through discipline and command presence, Remy attracted loyalty more naturally through warmth, sincerity, and an ability to make people feel understood.

Though an accomplished pilot in his own right, Remy approached leadership differently than his father. More social and emotionally open, he naturally became the center of tightly knit friendships both in and out of uniform. Cadets and officers alike gravitated toward him easily, drawn by his humor, compassion, easy confidence, and a genuine kindness that rarely felt performative. At times playful and mischievous, Remy possessed an ability to disarm tension that often made him equally effective in moments of conflict and crisis.

Outside the Academy, Remy maintained a deeply active lifestyle. A competitive gymnast throughout adolescence, he later developed interests in freerunning and parkour, valuing movement, adaptability, and physical discipline as both recreation and personal expression. He maintained interests in cooking, skiing, rock climbing, swimming, tennis, fencing, dance, and flying, while also developing a strong appreciation for French literature, wine, sociology, and galactic politics.

It was during his Academy years that Remy developed a close friendship with fellow cadet Evelyn Stewart.

Initially brought together through overlapping social circles, shared interests, and an easy chemistry, the two became close over the course of nearly two years. Despite significant differences in temperament, the friendship developed into one marked by unusual trust, humor, and familiarity. Where many found Stewart difficult to understand, Remy seemed to understand her naturally, often recognizing subtle shifts in mood or behavior long before others noticed anything wrong.

Likewise, Stewart found in Remy a steadiness, sincerity, and absence of judgement that gradually made him one of the few people she trusted without reservation.

The nature of their relationship shifted following the fallout surrounding the K-7 incident and Stewart’s increasingly self-destructive behavior in its aftermath. As scrutiny surrounding Stewart intensified and her future in Starfleet grew uncertain, Remy remained a constant presence in her life. Where others increasingly viewed Stewart through the lens of disciplinary issues and reputation, Remy never seemed particularly interested in reducing her to her worst moments.

He accepted her completely—strengths, flaws, poor decisions and all.

That acceptance, more than anything else, became the foundation of their relationship.

What began as friendship gradually developed into something deeper, built on familiarity, trust, and a closeness that had already existed long before either openly acknowledged romantic feelings.

By the time Stewart began rebuilding her standing at the Academy, the two had entered a deeply committed relationship. To those who knew them, the pairing appeared unusually effortless—built less on intensity than familiarity, affection, and a rare ease with one another that made the relationship appear remarkably stable despite the pressures surrounding them.

Stewart became a frequent presence in Julien Naal’s orbit, and for a time the three developed an easy familiarity uncommon in Julien’s otherwise disciplined personal life. Quiet dinners, debates over politics and Starfleet, and evenings spent together became common during Remy’s senior years at the Academy, with Julien privately pleased by both the relationship and Stewart’s growing maturity.

By Remy’s final year at the Academy, the two had become engaged and intended to marry following Stewart’s graduation.

However, Remy’s growing disillusionment with Starfleet increasingly complicated those plans.

Though he respected the institution and deeply believed in its ideals, Remy increasingly struggled with the belief that meaningful service existed exclusively within it. Years of conflicted feelings surrounding Starfleet, combined with frustration toward bureaucracy, political compromise, and what he increasingly viewed as institutional limitations in responding to humanitarian crises, gradually reshaped his convictions. Unlike his father, who believed difficult systems were worth improving from within, Remy increasingly believed meaningful change often required working outside them.

Six months into his first assignment following graduation, Remy resigned his commission and joined the United Relief Council.

The decision proved deeply divisive.

Though rooted in genuine conviction, Remy’s transition into humanitarian work quickly placed him in an unexpectedly visible role. A former Starfleet officer, capable pilot, and son of a respected Dominion War captain, Remy became one of the more recognizable public faces of the URC. The organization, eager to strengthen legitimacy and cooperation with Federation systems, proved more than willing to place him in prominent outreach and leadership positions.

Remy accepted the responsibility, believing public trust and visibility were necessary to accomplish meaningful work.

Julien viewed the situation differently.

Already skeptical of organizations operating too closely alongside Federation politics, he grew increasingly uncomfortable watching his son become a recognizable representative for an institution he believed too vulnerable to optics and political influence. To Julien, the humanitarian mission remained honorable. Everything surrounding it felt more complicated.

The tension further strained an already fragile relationship.

For Stewart, the change proved equally difficult.

Having fought hard to rebuild her place within Starfleet following years of personal and professional setbacks, Remy’s departure increasingly felt to her like distance—not only from Starfleet, but from the future, values, and life they had quietly expected to build together. What had once been an easy and deeply loving relationship gradually became strained by convictions neither was ultimately willing to abandon.

Their engagement ended.

Though the closeness and affection between them never entirely disappeared, the relationship never fully returned to what it had once been. Even years later, Remy remained one of the few people capable of reading Stewart with unusual clarity, often recognizing distress, avoidance, or self-destructive habits long before she admitted to them herself. Likewise, those close to him occasionally noted a lingering hesitation whenever conversations turned toward old Academy years, Starfleet, or the life he had once expected to have.

Following his resignation, Remy committed himself fully to humanitarian work through the United Relief Council, eventually rising into an executive role overseeing refugee integration, logistics, and civilian relief operations. Known for his warmth, sincerity, and uncommon ability to build trust quickly, Remy proved particularly effective in unstable environments where diplomacy, reassurance, and personal relationships mattered as much as logistics. Unlike his father, whose authority often came through discipline and quiet command presence, Remy naturally inspired cooperation through empathy, humor, and a sincere investment in the people around him.

However, Remy’s compassion occasionally bordered on self-sacrificing idealism. Colleagues have at times criticized his tendency to overextend himself, assume responsibility for outcomes beyond his control, and struggle with the reality that not everyone can be saved. Though compassionate, Remy can at times view issues in frustratingly black-and-white terms, particularly when he feels institutions or individuals have failed people in need.

The Romulan refugee crisis following the destruction of the Romulan Star Empire further elevated Remy’s role within the URC. Acting as both advocate and coordinator between Starfleet, Federation leadership, and humanitarian organizations, he became increasingly involved in politically tense relocation efforts, refugee negotiations, and crisis management across Federation colonies. His passionate defense of humanitarian intervention during high-level Starfleet briefings gained both admirers and critics, particularly among officers less comfortable with Federation involvement in Romulan affairs.

Relations between Remy and Julien remain strained.

Though affection and respect persist beneath the surface, conversations between father and son are infrequent and often marked by longstanding frustrations surrounding Starfleet, duty, and the personal cost of service. Remy continues to carry resentment surrounding Julien’s prolonged absences throughout childhood, while Julien remains deeply disappointed by what he views as his son walking away from an institution he believed worth improving from within.

Neither man is particularly eager to test the limits of those disagreements.

Complicating matters further is Julien’s continued closeness with Evelyn Stewart, whose mentorship under the elder Naal deepened long after her separation from Remy and whose relationship with Julien often resembles something closer to family than either is likely to openly acknowledge. Though rarely discussed outright, the dynamic remains an uncomfortable one for all involved—particularly given the history they continue to share.

By 2387, Remy had become one of the URC’s more prominent field executives, overseeing refugee operations and humanitarian coordination efforts during one of the Federation’s most politically volatile humanitarian crises in generations. Though confident in the path he ultimately chose, those closest to him quietly suspect the personal cost of that decision was greater than he ever expected.