After real!Graves returns to work, he enlists Scamander to help on a case. While thinking Newt useful, Percival doesn't have any illusions about the Hufflepuff house- after all, it has quite a bland reputation (especially in his, Wampus's opinion). Newt, surprisingly, keeps proving him wrong.
1. Dumb- when Newt cracks - almost playfully - one of the toughest cases Graves has ever come across in his career.
2. Boring- pretty soon Graves realizes that Scamander with his love for dangerous beasts and tendency to get into trouble is anything but boring.
3. Weak - when Grindewald's acolytes orchestrate his escape, Newt proves to be more deadly than a group of aurors Graves personally trained for combat, saves Graves and stops Grindewald from kidnapping the President.
4. Afraid to take risks- after Grindewald escapes, MACUSA starts a witch hunt- quite literally. Paranoia, looking for moles and traitors...And Graves is on top of the list. Of course, no one thinks he'd do anything like that in his right mind- but being in Grindewald's captivity for several months? Who knows what curses the dark wizard could've placed upon him...Graves finds himself more and more isolated, only to find Newt by his side, unperturbed by the risk of falling in love with a possible traitor.
5. Naive - Graves would've never thought that Newt, so shy and awkward, could be so adept in sexual gratification, and so shamelessly lustful. But Newt is a Hufflepuff, a house that prides itself in satisfaction of carnal desires.
And one time when Newt proved a Hufflepuff stereotype right:
+1. Loyal - Graves and Scamander follow Grindewald to England and into a trap. Grindewald generously offers Scamander to escape unharmed, leaving Graves to his fate, or face torture and slow death. Newt, proving his unswerving loyalty, refuses despite Graves pleading him to go. They are, however, saved - by Newts ingeniuity, his beasts, Credence, or a horde of angry Hufflepuffs who heard that their fellow classmate is being tortured by the dark wizard (you choose).
Newt Scamander/ Real!Graves : 5 times Newt proved Hufflepuff stereotypes wrong
Newt, surprisingly, keeps proving him wrong.
1. Dumb- when Newt cracks - almost playfully - one of the toughest cases Graves has ever come across in his career.
2. Boring- pretty soon Graves realizes that Scamander with his love for dangerous beasts and tendency to get into trouble is anything but boring.
3. Weak - when Grindewald's acolytes orchestrate his escape, Newt proves to be more deadly than a group of aurors Graves personally trained for combat, saves Graves and stops Grindewald from kidnapping the President.
4. Afraid to take risks- after Grindewald escapes, MACUSA starts a witch hunt- quite literally. Paranoia, looking for moles and traitors...And Graves is on top of the list. Of course, no one thinks he'd do anything like that in his right mind- but being in Grindewald's captivity for several months? Who knows what curses the dark wizard could've placed upon him...Graves finds himself more and more isolated, only to find Newt by his side, unperturbed by the risk of falling in love with a possible traitor.
5. Naive - Graves would've never thought that Newt, so shy and awkward, could be so adept in sexual gratification, and so shamelessly lustful. But Newt is a Hufflepuff, a house that prides itself in satisfaction of carnal desires.
And one time when Newt proved a Hufflepuff stereotype right:
+1. Loyal - Graves and Scamander follow Grindewald to England and into a trap. Grindewald generously offers Scamander to escape unharmed, leaving Graves to his fate, or face torture and slow death. Newt, proving his unswerving loyalty, refuses despite Graves pleading him to go.
They are, however, saved - by Newts ingeniuity, his beasts, Credence, or a horde of angry Hufflepuffs who heard that their fellow classmate is being tortured by the dark wizard (you choose).