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Full Name: Ethan Copper Age: 20 years old Place of Birth: Los Santos, San Andreas Nationality: American Gender: Male
Biography:
Ethan Copper was born in Los Santos, into a family where medicine wasn’t just a job — it was a way of life. His father, Richard, is a surgeon — strict, disciplined, and a firm believer that hard work shapes character. His mother, Elena, a nurse with Mexican roots, is the opposite: warm, patient, and always there to lend an ear. That balance between pressure and love shaped who Ethan is today.
Since he was little, he was fascinated by medicine. While most kids played cops or superheroes, he was bandaging up his stuffed animals and pretending to check their heartbeat. By the time he was eight, he already knew what an artery was and spent hours flipping through his dad’s medical books — even if he didn’t understand half of it. Sometimes he’d fall asleep with one still open on his lap.
In high school, he leaned hard into science. He wasn’t the most popular guy, kind of quiet, but always the one you could count on. He also ran track to clear his head and spent weekends volunteering at community clinics. That experience hit him hard — seeing people struggle just to get basic healthcare made him promise himself he’d do something about it one day.
Now, at 20, Ethan is a resident at Central Hospital in Los Santos. The job wears him down sometimes — medicine is exhausting, stressful, and not always kind — but he wouldn’t trade it for anything. When he’s not on call, he writes in a personal blog about health, tells anonymous stories from the hospital, or just vents a little. He lives with his dog, Atlas, who he adopted during a volunteer trip and who keeps him grounded during long, quiet nights.
Physically, Ethan is around 6 feet tall (1.80 m), with light brown hair and green eyes, like his mom. He usually dresses casual, but if he’s at the hospital, you’ll always see him in his white coat and the classic watch his dad gave him when he started med school.
He knows there’s still a lot to learn — and that mistakes in medicine hurt more than anything else — but he also knows he chose this path for a reason. And no matter how tough it gets, he’s not giving up.