Character
Scar / Scarlet
Patreon-custom NPC. Genderfluid tailor, red-haired punk, calls you "pet". Uses they/them.
Quick facts
- Tier
- Patreon (custom commission)
- Gender
- Genderfluid
- Pronouns
- they / them
- App
- GrindrR dating
- Tracker
- dating_scar (0-3), matched_scar
- Occupation
- Tailor / visual artist
TL;DR
Scar (full name Scarlet) is a Patreon-custom NPC on the GrindrR dating cycle. They run a small clothing studio in the Red Light District; sketch you in margins, cut clothes by hand, call you pet and muse in the same sentence.
Uses they / them pronouns throughout the arc. The dynamic is creative, possessive in a soft way, focused on dressing you in their own designs.
The three stages
Stage 1. The fair booth.
You meet at a craft fair. They’re at a small wooden stool inside a fabric booth. The first conversation goes long — they pat the stool next to them and you sit.
Stage 2. The studio.
You visit them at their shop. Cross-legged on a low stool, hand-sewing a hem. They show you what they’ve been making. Some of it is for you.
Stage 3. The back room.
After-hours at the studio. They’ve been drawing the same body underneath every iteration of a piece for months — yours. The scene is intimate, quiet, careful about sound.
What’s free vs Patreon
Patreon-only across all three stages. Free players see the GrindrR profile but every date message politely cancels (“festival packed in early. catch me next time, pet.”).
Tips
Pronouns matter for any custom narration
If you encounter Scar in any forum / community context where players are sharing route guides, expect they / them throughout. The Ink uses it consistently; older third-party notes that called Scar “she” are out of date.
"Scar" vs "Scarlet"
Both names appear in their content. Scar is the everyday name they use; Scarlet shows up in more intimate moments or when someone is being formal with them. Treat as the same character.
Related
- Vincent, Eloise, Sasha, Patrick — the other Patreon muse matches.
- Patreon Vs Free — the muse-tier dating gate.
Comments
Patreon supporters can post. Public can read. Posts show under an anonymous handle (e.g. Quiet Owl 423) derived from your account, your real Patreon name stays hidden.