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The Child
All-Stars
Beta poster and design
Voiced by: Sophia Grana (Beta, English), Gina C. Ramirez (Spanish), Aubrey Lima (English)additional VAs
Label: The Child
Team: Manic Raccoons (AC)/Teal Team (DC Ep. 1), Purple Team (DC Ep. 1 - Onwards), Magenta Team (AS)
Placement: 1st/2nd (AC)/2nd (DC), 13th (AS)
Eliminated in: Episode 10 (AC)/Episode 13 (DC), Episode 7(AS)

You look at her and see a small, defenseless girl. Then you think to yourself, who was cruel enough to send a child to this kind of camp? But are we really talking about a defenseless little girl here? Be careful, because those innocent eyes can lead you into a trap more than once... or are we just exaggerating?


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    A-H 
  • Abusive Parents: Implied; she states her mother views her as a "monster" and has told her she wishes she never gave birth to her. She also later suggests her father also views her in a similar light and, when she gets a letter from both of her parents, she's unenthusiastic plus burns it. When Alec asks her about it, she suggests it was likely her parents blaming themselves for her behavior.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: A very minor example that takes time to notice: her eyes are the same shade of brown as her hair in the beta, but they're a different, paler shade of brown in the reboot of Season 1. She also wears brown shoes in the original, but they're yellow and white in the reboot.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul:
    • In the beta, Nick became the closest thing to an enemy to Fiore, desiring to get her out once her true colors came out. In the remake, their relationship never gets to this point because Nick buys Fiore's lie about Lill burning his stuff and never questions her, making him another guy who got duped by Fiore's deceit.
    • Ashley was the first victim of Fiore's deceit, and thus, Fiore never saw her as anything other than a dumb fool. In the remake, Ashley is much more suspect of Fiore than the beta, which causes Fiore to see her as a potential problem from the get go.
    • Lill and Fiore barely interacted in the beta, and even when Lill eventually caught on to something being weird with Fiore, they never confronted each other directly. In the remake, Lill at least tries to act nice to Fiore, which results in Fiore burning Ashley and Nick's stuff in order to frame her for it, explicitly making them enemies.
    • Fiore and Miriam didn't interact act all in the beta before the latter was eliminated. Since the remake lets Miriam stick around for longer, the two end up developing a negative relationship, especially when Fiore begins targeting Jake.
    • The only times Fiore and Jake interacted in the beta were when they were paired up during the penultimate challenges, and when he and Tom were her helpers during the final challenge. In here, she and Jake only interact after Fiore's true nature is revealed and she rudely answers his question that she does what she does because she wants to because Jake doesn't manage to make it to the challenges where he and Fiore teamed up.
    • Outside of Tom indirectly telling her to go to hell alongside the other contestants and being one of her helpers for the final challenge, Fiore and Tom never interacted. In the remake, they're on decidedly worse terms since Tom threatens Fiore during the zombie apocalypse vr scenario, which then leads to Fiore targeting him during the moment when Ellie sabotages his and Jake's relationship.
    • Ellie's probably her biggest overhaul in terms of relationships. In the beta, they didn't exactly trust each other, but they decided to stick in their alliance alongside Grett purely out of pragmatism, and Ellie saw Fiore more as someone she could deal with easily when she picks her to go to the finale with her. In the remake, Fiore's constant manipulations and betrayals to Ellie causes her to become one of Ellie's most hated enemies,
  • Adaptational Nice Girl: Downplayed. In the beta, Fiore didn't really get along with anybody, with her alliance with Grett being done more to stay in the show than because she liked her. The reboot adds Alec, who ends up being one of the only people she's willing to be cordial with, even if her relationship with everyone else is still tense. She also greets and talks with Drew normally, without a hint of her usual snarkiness or malice.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: While Fiore was nasty in the beta, she didn't act any meaner than she needed to, and was able to act cordial with other people, if only to get something out of them. The remake makes Fiore not only much more prone to angry outbursts and being mean to people, but it's rare for an episode to go by where Fiore doesn't either insult the other contestants or otherwise tries to screw them over.
  • Adaptational Villainy: The remake has Fiore cross some lines that her beta self never did.
    • She burns Ashley and Nick's stuff during the night in order to frame Lill as the one who did it, when she mostly left Lill alone even when she started to catch on to her true nature.
    • Instead of staying quiet during the moment where Ellie reveals the sabotage on Tom and Jake's relationship, Fiore herself is the one who not only reveals the scheme, but also reveals that she knows that Tom has an Immunity Totem and tricked him into using it for Jake, only to smirk as it turns out that Tom was the target all along, letting the totem go to waste and Ellie be turned into a scapegoat while she and Alec are left alone.
  • Adult Hater: Implied. She finds most of the other contestants, who are mostly grown-ups, insufferable and later calls them "idiotic". In one confessional, she states she doesn't listen to her own mother (though it's later implied that her mother is abusive to her). She's even made several remarks about Lill (who's middle-aged) for having wrinkles. She also says "gays and boomers first" when making an excuse in Episode 11 for why Miriam (who's elderly) and Jake should go ahead of her in Episode 11 when the two were traversing through a cave as part of a challenge.
  • Affection-Hating Kid: Implied. She's a kid and, during the beta's finale, she's shown to be exasperated with Tom and Jake's affectionate hugging and kissing during the digging challenge. While she could just be annoyed at the fact that this leaves Fiore to do the work herself, she also widely smiles when Grett intentionally interrupts a romantic moment between Gabby and Ellie in the remake's intro. In the All-Stars intro, she seems happy to see a kiss between Riya and Connor get interrupted.
  • All for Nothing: Regardless of beta ending, Fiore doesn't get the million dollars. In Ellie's ending, she outright loses. In her own ending, Jensen steals her money while running away from the police. This also applies to the remake, as she ends in second place while Miriam crosses the finish line and wins the million dollars.
  • Animal Motifs: Cats. She makes a cat smile when showing her fake innocence, wears a cat on her pyjamas, and also acts mischievous while flying under the radar, much like a cat.
  • And There Was Much Rejoicing: When she winds up eliminated during Episode 7 of All-Stars, nobody's sad to see her go: Jake and Ashley just rub it in her face that she's finally out of their hair, and even Ally's more surprised by Fiore's outrageous claims to tick off Jake than saddened at the evil child going home.
  • Ash Face: Her face is covered in soot after her busted go-kart crashes on a tree inches away from the finish line.
  • The Baby of the Bunch: She's the youngest contestant in Season 1, being six years old in that season, and is retroactively the youngest contestant in Disventure Camp history since the youngest contestants in Season 2 are 16 and 17 respectively. It's the case once again in All-Stars, where she is eight years old and everyone else except Lake (who is 17) is older than 21.
  • Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work:
    • During the zombie apocalypse vr scenario, Fiore is ultimately the one to take out Grett and win the challenge, as there was nobody else alive at that point to do the deed.
    • Despite Tom being one of the most dangerous campers around due to his natural combat skills, nobody either was willing to strike him head on or willing to put their personal conflicts behind to do so. It's ultimately Fiore and Alec who come up with a plan to trick Tom into misusing his Immunity Totem on Jake so that he will be eliminated, removing one of the most powerful campers so far.
  • The Bad Guy Wins: Subverted. Her ending in Adventure Camp at first looks like it'll be a straight example, with her crossing the finish line while Ellie crashes into a tree, but she ends up being hit by the Bus of Losers and her money is stolen by Mr. Jensen while running away from the police.
  • Bad People Abuse Animals: She runs over a moose during the go-kart section of the final challenge.
  • Barely-Changed Dub Name: In the Polish dub, Fiore is renamed Fiora.
  • Bathroom Search Excuse: While climbing with the rest of her team to the log part of the first challenge, Fiore breaks off from the others saying that she needs to go to the bathroom, when in reality she wants to take advantage of the early game to try find an Immunity Totem.
  • Batman Gambit: Her plan in Episode 10 of the remastered version relies on Jake voting for Tom and Tom using his recently found immunity idol to save Jake from seemingly being eliminated.
  • Bearer of Bad News: In All-Stars, she tells Riya that their alliance was exposed to the Magenta Team and the Cyan Team.
  • Becoming the Mask: Fiore initially allied up with Alec purely for the sake of strength in numbers. However, the longer they spent together, the more Fiore came to actually care about him, to the point that she was actually worried for his well being while he was fending off a giant scorpion.
  • Berserk Button: Do not tell her what to do. If she doesn't listen to her own mother, she won't listen to you, and will frame you for it in response.
  • Big Bad: The villainous camper who makes it until the very end of the competition in the first season.
  • Bitch Alert: The very first thing Fiore does once she boards the jet and Yul notices her is shoot back that he's an "ugly pimply bitch" without hesitation, making it clear to everyone that she's just as nasty as she was back in Season 1.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: A friendly little girl on the outside, a cruel manipulator on the inside. Ashley later lampshades it.
  • Blunt "No": When Tom asks her if she knows how to swim during the first part of the final challenge, Fiore's answer is a rather straightforward no.
  • Boarding School: If her first scenes in All Stars are any indication, it's implied her parents sent her to one.
  • Brains Evil, Brawn Good: Physically, Fiore is overpowered by just about everybody else in strength except maybe Miriam, who still has her beat in size. To compensate for this, she uses her smarts and wit in order to either outmaneuver them or trick them into helping her. Indeed, as the beta shows, every time Fiore's either forced to work without her wits, she's taken out very quickly.
  • Brainy Brunette: She's cunning for her age, a good manipulator, and she has brown hair.
  • Bratty Half-Pint: She's a kid and once her true nature gets exposed by her confessional being revealed, showing her insulting all the contestants, she drops any pretense of being a nice girl and decides to act like her true, maliciously snarky self to everyone else. She hasn't gotten any nicer in the two years since Season 1, outright calling Yul an "ugly pimply bitch" when he points out her arrival.
  • Bring My Brown Pants: In the original version of Episode 4, she wets herself out of fear while facing Grett in the challenge.
  • Brutal Honesty: She has no qualms speaking her mind, which Alec lampshades via calling her brutally honest after her attempt at a joke that money will solve his marital problems.
    • When her true nature is revealed in episode 8 of the remake, she responds to Jake's question as to why she'd say stuff like that by saying that she does it because she wants to, and he better get used to it.
    • In Episode 9, she describes Alec's marriage as a divorce waiting to happen and tells Grett that her parents will never love her no matter how many times she succeeds at anything.
  • But for Me, It Was Tuesday:
    • In the beta, while watching who the campers are supporting for in the final challenge, Fiore comes across Ashley, who's still angry at her for not only deceiving her and saying nasty things about her in her notebook, but taking her out of the competition by knocking her out with tranquilizer darts alongside Grett. Fiore, for her part, barely cares enough to remember her, outright asking her who she was and coupling it with thinking she didn't even participate when she ends up losing in Ellie's ending.
    • This also applies in All-Stars, where despite having gotten Ashley voted out and throwing Alec into a ditch by getting him voted out of the final three, she reacts with indifference at best and annoyance at worst at the fact that the two of them would still hold a grudge.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Besides her taking enjoyment in her crueler acts, she reveals her mother was right about her being a "monster". However, she seems hurt when Jake calls her a "demon child" in All-Stars.
  • Cheaters Never Prosper: Played with across the series:
    • Subverted in Episode 1. Switching her team's flag for a fake she had made results in her team's victory.
    • Played straight in the finale. Sending Grett to sabotage one of the go-karts ends with her getting the faulty one after Tom switched their flags. Not only does it slow her down, but when it completely stops functioning, Fiore hits its engine, which sends her flying and crashing into a tree, thus losing the race.
  • The Chessmaster: She has her moments of manipulating situations to her advantage, like when she orchestrates Tom's elimination.
  • Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: If you're one of allies, don't be surprised if she betrays you. Will, Ashley, Grett, Ellie, and Alec learned this the hard way. Even in the finale when she makes a temporary alliance with Miriam to eliminate Ellie before the Final 2, she still double-crosses her by tricking her and trying to potentially get her eliminated.
  • Composite Character: She takes over Ellie's spot as the one who ultimately decides who goes with her to the finale, and who betrays her closest friend to bring a supposedly easier target instead.
  • Crazy-Prepared: The immunity totem she seemingly found and gave to Grett in the beta was actually a fake one, meaning that even if Grett decided to use it and potentially get Fiore herself voted out, it would be counted as invalid and would still end in Grett being removed.
  • Cute Is Evil: Fiore looks as cute as you'd expect a small child to be, but she has a disturbingly malicious and manipulative mind.
  • Damsel in Distress: Twice in the remake, and both lead Alec to be her rescuer.
    • During episode 9, Tom pins Fiore against a tree and threatens to shoot her in order to force her to tell him where Alec and Grett are. This prompts Alec to rush in to protect her, but Tom shoots him instead.
    • During episode 11, the giant scorpion on the mines snatched Fiore with its pincers, forcing Alec to fight it to free her. This Time proves to be more successful, and he manages to free Fiore from the creature's grasp.
  • David Versus Goliath: Episode 4 of the beta has her, a tiny six year old girl with little brawn, face off against Grett, who's twice her size and possibly thrice her weight. Fiore doesn't even attempt to manipulate her and just begs her to go easy on her, words that fall on deaf ears as Grett sends her flying afterwards.
  • Decoy Backstory: When she's questioned on what she's doing in a competition filled with grown ups, Fiore says that her parents were short on money and she was sent there in order to help alleviate their debts. Not even five minutes after saying that, though, her confessional reveals this to be a lie, and the real reason she's there is never revealed.
  • Delayed Reaction: Fiore's face is frozen in look of shocked, disgusted disbelief as she processes the fact that she just lost the race during Ellie's ending.
  • Deliberately Cute Child: She plays the "cute little girl" aesthetic she has for all that it's worth, using it to manipulate the other contestants and get them to do what she wants. She eventually drops this once she accidentally reveals her true colors to Will and Lill and Ashley expose her diary's content, which has her writing and her true thoughts spilling out, choosing to act like the manipulative mastermind she is.
  • Demoted to Extra: Downplayed. In All Stars, while Fiore lasts more than the previous two winners, she also suffers from this, going from being the Season 1 runner-up to a pre-merge elimination.
  • Dick Dastardly Stops to Cheat: Believing that she could never have a chance of defeating Miriam in the go-karts on her own, she sends Grett to go and sabotage one of the go-karts so that Miriam will get a busted one. However, Miriam, knowing full well what Fiore is really like by now, sends Tom to go and watch over the go-karts to make sure that she doesn't, leading him to thwart her by swapping the flags on the two go-karts once Grett has sabotaged one. As a result, Fiore ends up taking the broken-down go-kart, which ends up breaking down, exploding, and crashing into a tree, letting Miriam take home an easy victory when Fiore may have had an actual chance if she had just tried to race her fairly for once.
  • Didn't See That Coming: In both the beta and the remake, Fiore's just as shocked as everyone else when the showrunner of the season reveals everyone's confessionals during one of the elimination ceremonies. It's particularly bad in her case, however, since she used the confessionals to catch a break from her nice girl act and be her real, snarky self, which causes everyone to discover her true personality.
  • Didn't Think This Through:
    • In spite of being a master strategist, she writes about her Manipulative Bitch stunts in her diary, which eventually is used to expose her true nature to her team. It's subverted in that it doesn't amount to anything, as her strong alliance keeps her safe regardless.
    • In her ending in the beta, where she runs straight towards the Bus of Losers in order to try and get the money back from Jensen. Not to the sides to hopefully get in and wrestle the man for it, but straight in front of it, which results in her getting run over.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: She burns some of Ashley's and Nick's stuff and then claims Lill did it as her way to lash out at Lill for telling her to go to sleep the night before once.
  • Dissonant Serenity: She has a calm smile on her face as she shoots Grett dead to end the vr world simulation.
  • Enemy Mine: In the beta, she teams up with Grett, who's on the opposite team, in order to get rid of Ashley after the latter had discovered her notebook and, by extension, her true nature.
  • Enfant Terrible: She may look like a nice little girl, but in reality, she is a ruthless strategist. Jake lampshades it by calling her a "demon child" in All-Stars.
  • Entitled Bitch: She seems to expect Alec to help her in the finale of the reboot, despite betraying him an episode prior. When she crashes into a tree, she seems to expect at least one of the other contestants to help her, despite tricking or betraying many of them.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Alec is pretty much the only person that Fiore's shown to give a damn about. She treats him with a bit more amicability than the other contestants, apologizes to him when she makes a tasteless joke at his expense, and looks genuinely shocked to see him being shot even though she knew the zombie scenario was a simulation. When he saves her from a scorpion and tells her to escape without him, she's reluctant to do so and tells him she can't leave him. She also admits she did "really like" him and claimed she was grateful for his help. However, she seems to have stopped caring about him after she chose to go to the finale with Ellie and Miriam instead of him.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Despite how cruel and devious she is, she actually seems horrified when Alec gets shot in the chest, even though she knew it was part of a stimulation.
  • Evil Gloating: Gloating can ensue when she's in the villainous mood, like telling Lill and Ashley "Goodbye suckers!" when they're eliminated. It comes back to bite her when Derek exposes footage of her voting in Episode 8 (in which she gloats that "Sometimes, the trash takes itself out" and about how the other contestants fell for her trap) as it exposed her true nature to her non-alliance members.
  • Evil Has a Bad Sense of Humor: She tries to crack a joke at Alec at one point, but the joke in question mostly points out how the money could help him with his marital problems. Alec is not amused.
  • Evil Is Petty: She burns Ashley and Nick's stuff and frames Lill for it because the latter had the audacity to tell her to go to sleep.
  • Ex-Big Bad: She goes from the main antagonistic camper of Season 1 to only one of several antagonists present in All-Stars.
  • Exact Words: In the beta, in order to get Grett's help with getting rid of Ashley after she read her notebook, Fiore offers her an Immunity Totem she found in return. However, Fiore never said the totem was real, so when Grett tries to use it during an elimination ceremony where she's got majority votes, the totem is exposed as a fake, with Fiore quietly giggling to herself as Grett realizes she's been duped.
  • Face of an Angel, Mind of a Demon: She appears innocent initially and is cute, but is actually evil and manipulative.
  • Fair-Play Villain: After spending most of the beta cheating the other contestants out through subterfuge and taking advantage of her cute looks, Fiore spends most of the final challenge playing by the rules; she has Jake do the first part of the challenge, which is allowed, only because she can't swim, and then digs her next clue on her own before taking over and driving her go-kart towards the finish line by herself. She only briefly slows down to bump into Ellie's go-kart to try slow it down, but she only does this once before driving away and letting Grett's sabotage on the other go-kart do the rest of the work.
  • The Farmer and the Viper: She's the Viper to Ashley's Farmer, funnily enough. Ashley's the first camper to be nice to Fiore and fall for her tricks, treating her rather affectionately while Fiore, being Fiore, only sees her as another pawn to be used and discarded once she's no longer useful. Once Ashley reads Fiore's notebook and learns what she's really like, Fiore wastes no time recruiting Grett in order to shoot her with enough tranquilizer darts to knock her out, eliminating her from the game.
  • Fastball Special: She's on the receiving end of this in the beta, where Jake grabs her and throws her high up to the pole in order to grab the flag, which she successfully does... with her face.
  • Fat and Skinny: She forms this dynamic with Grett (who's overweight in the beta and its remake) in the beta, choosing to form an alliance with her in order to avoid being eliminated. She also ends up working with her in the finale of the reboot.
  • Females Are More Innocent: Exploited. Part of Fiore's "nice girl" facade utilizes the fact that she's a little girl to make everyone think she's harmless and not malicious at all.
  • Floral Theme Naming: Her name is Fiore and it means "flower" in Italian (and Corsican). Since she's Italian-American, it fits.
  • Frame-Up: Successfully frames Will, making her new teammates believe he was too scared to do the challenge (which he was) and lashed out on her in fear. In Episode 4, she frames Lill for burning some of Ashley's and Nick's stuff, though with even more varying results, as only Nick falls for it while the others either don't buy it or simply don't care.
  • Free-Range Children: One of the first things that both the beta and remake point out is that Fiore is a six year old girl who's participating in a competition filled with grown ups. Fiore says that she's there because her parents are low on money and she's a collateral, but this turns out to be a trick, and whenever Fiore isn't with her alliance, she generally keeps to herself.
  • Friend-or-Idol Decision: Being on the winning team in Episode 12 of the remake, she's given a choice who to let in the finale with her and Miriam. The choice being between Alec (friend) or Ellie, who'd be less of a threat (idol). She chooses the latter.
  • From the Mouths of Babes: Tends to spout out profane language despite her age, something that stuns Ellie when they first meet.
  • Gratuitous Italian: She gleefully bids "Ciao!" (which is Italian for "bye") after shooting Tom in Episode 9, also making this a Post-Mortem One-Liner. Presumably justified since she's Italian-American.
  • Hated by All:
    • Once Fiore shows her true colors, everyone ends up becoming her enemy, with only her wits and manipulative streak allowing her to stay long into the game. The reboot downplays this a bit by having Alec grow fond of her until she betrays him, but she's still disliked by the rest of the contestants once the truth comes out. When she makes it to the finale, the only person rooting for her was Grett, who was forced to. Also, when she crashes into a tree, none of the contestants even try to help her with Alec and Ashley insulting her.
    • This becomes even more pronounced during All-Stars, since everybody knows of her true nature to begin with: her attempt to make an alliance with Ashley and Jake fails, her inability to help during the first challenge doesn't endear her to her teammates, and when she begs Alec for help, the man just shuts her down and leaves her to her own devices. This leaves her as the definitive first pick for elimination on the Magenta Team and it's only due to a last minute argument between Jake and James that leads the latter to be eliminated instead, though it's implied Alec orchestrated it. While Ally later considers having her join her alliance with Hunter, that seems to be because she was worried Jake and Ashley (who are allies) would be a threat. Additionally, she and her other teammates even leave Fiore to do the second challenge herself.
  • Hates Everyone Equally: In the beta, there wasn't a single person that Fiore actually liked, with her either seeing people as usable pawns at best, or enemies to be taken out at worst. The reboot slightly downplays this with Alec, whom she seems to get along with just fine, but she still doesn't like everyone else.
  • Height Angst: Implied. Being six-years-old, she's short in height and she states that her small stature has been "a detriment to [her] goals". This is why she was satisfied to have a challenge in which it benefits her.
  • Hoist by Her Own Petard: Just like the other campers, Fiore uses the confessional in order to speak her real thoughts in private; in particular, she uses it to act in her true persona and take a break from the innocent little girl act she puts up constantly. This ends up being her undoing when everyone's confessionals get exposed during one of the elimination ceremonies, showing a confessional where Fiore insults everyone over being too dumb to fall for her act.
  • Holding in Laughter: Does this twice in the beta, first when the Immunity Totem she gave Grett is exposed as a fake and Grett realizes far too late that she's been played, and then during the moment when Ellie chooses to take her to the finale over Jake, thinking that she would be an easy victory.
  • Humiliation Conga:
    • In the original Adventure Camp, while Fiore simply loses in Ellie's ending, she undergoes a brief one in her ending. While she wins, she gets her money stolen. When she tries to get it back, she fails and gets hit by a bus, though it's implied she survived.
    • In the remake, she ends up having to ride a faulty cart, causing her to fall behind Miriam who later bumps into her. In a fit of anger, she later hits her kart, causing it to explode and give her a huge boost. However, she crashes into a tree close to the finish line, resulting in Miriam winning instead of her. Additionally, none of the contestants even try to help her, with Alec and Ashley even insulting her.

    I-Z 
  • Iconic Item: Her Secret Diary.
  • Improbable Infant Survival: While nobody was in any true danger to begin with, she outlasts everyone else in the zombie apocalypse VR simulation in Episode 9 and wins immunity.
  • Informed Attribute: In the second episode of All-Stars, it's stated the Purple Team lost almost every single challenge because of Fiore. While they lost many challenges and she is physically weak due to being a small child, their losses from don't seem to be her fault. They lost in Episode 2 due to Will's cowardice getting the better of him and their loss in Episode 4 was caused by Nick being The Load. Although she helped Alec cook in Episode 5 and the food the team had to eat was inedible, that seemed to be more due to the food being disgusting itself; they had to make a stew with chicken guts, fish eyes, and worms. After cooking, Alec even suggests there isn't much that could be done with fish eyes. The opposing team also had Miriam (who was able to make the Teal Team's food taste "delicious") and nobody on the Purple Team seems to be as good as cooking as her.
  • Innocently Insensitive: She cracks a joke to Alec about how the money could probably help him with his marital problems. The fact that Fiore actually apologizes when Alec points out how hurtful it was confirms that she was actually trying to make a joke and not being her usual snarky self.
  • Ironic Name: Her name is Fiore, which is Italian for "flower", which could mean "gentle" or "happiness", Fiore is anything but that.
  • Irony: In the first episode, she tricked Tom by switching her team's flag for a fake one she had made. In the finale, Tom uses a similar trick against her, switching the flags of the go-karts, which causes her to get the one that Grett had sabotaged per her orders.
  • Jerkass: Fiore looks like a nice little girl, but her real personality is that of a rude, malicious Tiny Tyrannical Girl who sees the other contestants as tools to be used at best, and obstacles to take out at worst. The remake pulls back on this a little by giving her an actual friend in Alec, but she's still rather unpleasant to everyone else.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: While she's usually anything but pleasant, in the second episode of All-Stars, she tells the rest of the Magneta Team that she doubts their tent is waterproof. This is because, as she pointed out, the team she was a part of in the first season (the Purple Team) won a waterproof tent and it didn't look like the tent the Magenta Team has. Not only is it clear that she's right the Purple Team won a waterproof tent as that challenge is shown to the viewer, it's later suggested that she's right that their tent isn't waterproof.
  • Jerkass to One: Inverted. In both the beta and the remake, Fiore's true self is that of a conniving manipulator who sees everyone else as either pawns or obstacles, so she's usually rather nasty either in private or after her true nature is exposed. Alec, meanwhile, is the only person that Fiore's willing to tolerate, with their relationship growing into her somewhat liking him as the series goes on.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: In the beta, she got by manipulating everyone and being a malicious jerk, while always finding a way to stay in the game until the finale, which is when her luck runs out, either outright losing to Ellie in her ending, or her victory being cut short by Jensen stealing the money in her own ending. This also applies in the remake, where she falls just short of the finish line after her go-kart explodes, and is left as Miriam crosses the finish line instead.
  • Karmic Butt-Monkey: Especially in the beta, in which it's hard for an episode to go by without Fiore being either humiliated by the other campers, or having her smarts backfire on her. However, she's also a cruel and manipulative Bitch in Sheep's Clothing. This later applies to her in Episode 12 of the remake, when she ends up suffering physical abuse through most of the challenges, being thrown off the cliff by Miriam (and not scoring a point due to not landing in the marked area at that), being the only one to fall and hit a pillar during tag-of-war after Miriam let go of the rope, and repeatedly falling off the greasy pole, with one of the times after being thrown by Miriam.
  • Kick the Morality Pet: While Alec originally seemed like her Morality Pet due to her showing concern for him several times and treating him decently, she ultimately betrays him via choosing to go to the finale with Ellie instead of him.
  • Kid Has a Point: She's six-years-old and she has her moments of making valid points over older contestants. For instance, although she lost her patience with Will (who's older than her), she was right at calling him out for choosing to stay behind to argue with her over completing the challenge.
    • During episode 3 of the remake, Fiore tries to argue that Alec should do the challenge, facing off his fear of losing his hair, because hair can always grow back. This isn't enough to convince him, however, and he refuses.
  • Know When to Fold 'Em: During the challenge in episode 4 of the beta, where she's forced to fight Grett, Fiore outright drops her weapon and pleads for mercy when confronted by her. It doesn't work, and Grett sends her straight to the water.
  • Lack of Empathy: What did she say when Tom and Alec were fighting during a challenge? Telling one to break the other's leg.
  • Lady Swearsalot: Swears the most out of any contestant in the show, despite her age.
  • Laser-Guided Karma:
    • After spending the whole season manipulating and scheming against her fellow contestants, she gets her comeuppance in the finale. In Adventure Camp, she either simply loses in Ellie's ending or wins, but gets her money stolen by Mr. Jensen who then hits her with a bus.
    • In Episode 11, she tricks Jake and Miriam plus causes the former to fall off a cliff. Miriam then sees through her trickery and throws her flashlight at her when she tries to escape.
    • In Episode 1, she wins the first challenge for her team by tricking Tom with a fake flag. In the finale, Tom counters Grett's attempt to sabotage Miriam by switching the flags on the go-karts, causing Fiore to get the sabotaged kart and resulting in her losing the finale to Miriam.
    • After spending the whole season sabotaging people to get ahead, Fiore ends up losing in the finale by being defeated by a sabotage of the go-karts by her own hands.
  • Like a Son to Me: Alec utters how he wishes his son was more like Fiore after their strategy to let Grett win immunity in episode 8 goes off without a hitch, which briefly confuses her.
  • Little Miss Snarker: Not so much while she's pretending to be nice, but she has her occasional snarky moments when she's showing her true nature. She's also six.
    Fiore: Lill, I'm voting for you so you can crawl back to whatever Disney movie your wrinkled witch face came from.
  • Made of Iron: She's still able to stand without much trouble in the finale despite her go-kart not only having exploded, but sent her flying and crashing into a tree.
  • Manipulative Bitch: Mostly in the beta and the remake of season one, which shows she's good at tricking people into thinking she's a powerless and nice little girl plus has the acting skills to pull it off. Even when her true nature is revealed, she still has enough wits to manipulate the other campers into either fighting each other, or being willing to help her.
  • Master Actress: She's a good actress, most notably in the beta and the remake of season one in which she fools the other contestants into thinking she's a nice and helpless little girl.
  • Meaningless Villain Victory: In her own ending, Fiore manages to cross the finish line before Ellie and successfully wins the million dollars. However, the rest of the events from Ellie's ending happen as they did prior, meaning the show's revealed to be a sham and Fiore loses her million dollars to Jensen.
  • Misplaced Retribution: In order to frame Lill to try and get her out of the camp, Fiore decides to burn the stuff from both Ashley and Nick, who have been nothing but nice to her up to that point.
  • Morality Pet: Alec acts as this for her. She generally treats him better than the rest of the cast, with her Pet the Dog moments usually being directed towards him. In Episode 11, she realizes she's actually worried for his well-being.
  • Motivational Lie: Kind of. After hearing about Grett's family trouble and revealing Alec's own issues, she then tells them, especially Grett, that they should try to win the game for themselves and prove their "loved" ones wrong. In her confessional right after, she makes it clear she doesn't actually care about Grett's issues, but believes that telling her this lie might be necessary to get her to work at her best.
  • Mythology Gag: After her go-kart crashes into a tree in the finale, she claims she feels as if she was hit by a bus - a reference to her Laser-Guided Karma from her ending of the beta version of the first season.
  • Near-Villain Victory: In Ellie's ending, Fiore ends up losing to Ellie at the last second from the boost she got from her Percussive Maintenance on her go-kart, with Fiore taking a few seconds to process her loss once she crosses the finish line. This is changed to an outright victory for her in her ending... For a given definition of victory.
  • The Night Owl: Downplayed. In the remake, she at one point is shown to stay up late into the night writing and making strategies on her notebook, something that Lill is quick to notice. Lill's attempt to get Fiore to sleep leads to Fiore framing her for burning Ashley and Nick's stuff, which she herself did to lash out at being told what to do.
  • No One Should Survive That!: She gets run over by the Bus of Losers while Jensen's running away with her money in her ending, but her leg twitch implies that she's okay, just unconscious.
  • Not-So-Harmless Villain: Even after her true nature is revealed, not everybody takes Fiore that seriously since, being only a six year old, she could theoretically be easily overpowered by just about everyone. However, what Fiore lacks in strength, she more than makes up in intelligence and deceit.
  • Obfuscating Stupidity: Fiore is introduced acting not much different from your typical six year old girl, but her first confessional makes it clear that this is all just an act: she's actually much smarter than she lets on, but pretends to be a normal six year old in order to get people to do what she wants. This is revealed in her first confessional which shows she's smart enough to keep up with the other contestants.
  • Oh, Crap!: The beta has her have a few moments like this.
    • She's horrified when she realizes that she dropped her notebook, which includes both her strategies and some select nasty words about Ashley, on the way while running away from a moose. By the time she returns to pick it up, Ashley has already found it and learned what Fiore was really like.
    • Then, during the paddlestick tournament, she looks terrified and even wets herself when she's forced to go up against Grett, who ignores her pleas for mercy and sends her flying into the lake.
    • Finally, she's stunned speechless when Ellie's Percussive Maintenance on her busted go-kart causes its engine to explode and send her flying past Fiore's go-kart, taking her straight through the finish line in Ellie's ending while just barely missing it in Fiore's ending.
    • The remastered version of Season 1 had an example of this when the hosts revealed who was voting for who by means of video recording in episode 8, which includes Fiore's true duplicitous nature.
  • Older Hero Versus Younger Villain: By virtue of being only six, and everyone else being either a teenager or a grown up, Fiore serves as the Younger Villain to everyone else, including her fellow finalist, Ellie. In the remake, she faces Miriam (who's seventy-two) in the final two.
  • Only Sane Woman: She seems to think of herself as such, stating she's the only one in the show "with a modicum of intelligence" and will be remembered as that. In execution, she doesn't qualify.
  • Pet the Dog:
    • In a rare moment of kindness, she apologizes to Alec for joking that money will solve his marital problems.
    • In Episode 11, she realizes she's worried about Alec's well-being. She also tells him to run and win immunity for himself as opposed to helping her and later trying to snatch it from him.
  • Pragmatic Villainy:
    • When voting off Grett in the reboot, she suggests she doesn't want to shoot someone in the face in person. However, she implies it's because she would get in trouble with the law for doing so not out of kindness as she says the challenge was the closest she'll get to legally doing so.
    • In All-Stars, she asks Jake if he was alright after being hit by a giant ball of yarn. However, this was to try to trick him into not voting for her rather than genuine concern.
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Along with being one of the most manipulative people in the series, she calls Ashley (who's from a rural area) "Hillbilly girl" in her notebook. She even calls Ellie, who's a redhead, ginger snap after she's seemingly elimination. In the seventh episode of the reboot, she says "gays and boomers first" when teamed up with Miriam (who's old) and Jake (who's gay). In All-Stars, she calls Jake "twinkie boy" and insults Connor (who's in his fifties) by calling him a "boomer". While she is a kid and children generally don't fully grasp political correctness, she is shown to be very smart for her age.
  • Psycho Pink: Befitting of a sadistic and manipulative Bitch in Sheep's Clothing, her swimsuit in All-Stars is pink. It also fits considering she's on the Magenta Team that season.
  • Psychotic Smirk: When she's in the devious mood, she can make evil-looking smirks, if not Slasher Smiles.
  • Punched Across the Room: During the paddlestick tournament challenge in the beta, Fiore's forced to go against Grett, who not only physically overpowers her, but hits her with enough force to send her flying into the lake, far away from the platform they were standing on.
  • Puppy-Dog Eyes: She pulls off wide and tearful-looking eyes as part of her "innocent little girl" act as a failsafe in case her acting isn't enough, which seems to be done to make herself look cuter and/or gain sympathy.
  • Pyrrhic Victory: She wins in her ending of the original Adventure Camp, but she's hit by a bus driven by Mr. Jensen, who stole her money prize as he fled from the police.
  • Rage Breaking Point: Seeing Will acting too scared of the water to row faster causes her to lose her patience and snap at him, accidentally revealing her true nature to him in the process.
  • Right for the Wrong Reasons: Her advice to Alec and Grett that they should start looking for themselves more since money won't solve all their problems they have in their lives is correct, but she uses this as a way to justify her evilness.
  • Sadist:
    • She wants Alec to break Tom's leg while they were fighting during a challenge in Episode 4. In Episode 7, she throws a rock at Grett. While that seemed to be done in the heat of the moment, she later admits it was "satisfying". She even lets out an Evil Laugh when she causes Dan to fall and causes his glasses to break. Moreover, she implies in Episode 9 that she wants to shoot someone in the face. She also finds Jake and Ellie arguing in Episode 11 to be "funny", and in Episode 13, she "gloated" at the possibility of Tom being dead from going after Jensen.
    • In the original version of the first season, she's eager to shoot Ashley with a tranquilizer gun and happily considers throwing her unconscious body into a lake.
  • Secret Diary: She has a notebook that she uses as a diary, writing about her Frame-Up achievements on the show, which she keeps hidden. Ashley and Lill find it and use it to expose her true nature to their team.
  • Secret-Keeper: After noticing things popping in and out of reality, Alec reveals to Fiore that the world they're in is a virtual reality one, and she promises to keep this a secret so she can win immunity.
  • Smug Smiler: If Fiore is smiling, it generally means one of two things; she's either with Alec and he's bringing out her nicer side, or she's either planning to manipulate someone, thinking of a plan to get ahead in the game, or enjoying seeing her manipulations come to fruition.
  • Sore Loser: In the original version, she is not happy with her defeat in Ellie's ending, cursing out everyone in her final confessional after Ellie expresses relief that she won. Same goes for the remake in which she loses the million dollars to Miriam. Then again in All-Stars, when after she is eliminated by her team she spends a while insulting Jake and trying to get under his skin by making him think he's being manipulated by Ashley, and then snaps at Connor when they are waiting for the Bus of Losers.
  • Super Drowning Skills: Implied. During the final challenge, Tom asks Fiore if she knows how to swim since the first part of the challenge involves diving into the lake to look for a key. Fiore's answer is a Blunt "No", leading Jake to be the one to do it.
  • Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: After antagonising so many of her fellow contestants in Season 1 and after betraying everyone that has ever trusted or befriended her, when she is chosen to be part of the All Stars cast she is Hated by All, which results in her Villain Decay: Jake and Ashley know better than to trust her, and James, Hunter and Ally also don't take her much seriously due to both knowing how she is like and to her being rather useless for most challenges. Had Alec not orchestrated an argument between Jake and James, Fiore would probably have been the first boot of the season, and her luck eventually runs out and she's eliminated in "Ball Busters", being the 6th contestant eliminated (out of 18 contestants).
  • Team Member in the Adaptation: In the original version of the season, Fiore was teammates with Ashley, Ellie, Lill, Nick and Will from the beginning. Here, she starts being teammates with Dan, Grett, Jake, Miriam and Tom before swapping teams due to being voted off in a mock elimination ceremony for being apparently weak.
  • Teeth-Clenched Teamwork:
    • During one challenge, she's left working with Miriam, although it's clear neither of them like each other. She also allies herself with her in All-Stars, though they seem to still hate each other.
    • In the finale of the reboot, she ends having to work with Grett. However, neither of them seem to like each other.
    • In All-Stars, while neither of them like one another, she ends up being on the same team as Ashley.
  • This Is Gonna Suck: As Jared explains the paddlestick tournament challenge, Fiore's confessional has her looking utterly frustrated, as she's quick to point out the inherent disadvantage she has as a six year old girl going up against mostly grown ups.
  • Throwing the Fight: Her strategy for Episode 8's challenge involves intentionally guessing the answers wrong so as not to win and therefore stay under the radar for not taking anyone's "lives" as well as to ensure a fellow Big Bad, who is otherwise most likely to be voted out, wins immunity.
  • Tiny Tyrannical Girl: Fiore's only six and the shortest contestant in season 1, and while she at first puts on the air of being an innocent little girl, once that gets thrown out the window, Fiore proves to be one of the more bossy and malicious contestants in the season.
  • Token Evil Teammate: Of the Purple Team, being the most manipulative and malicious member of the team.
  • Token Mini-Moe: She is one of the few characters who isn't around the age of teenagers, easily having the distinction of being the youngest contestant in the show.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: It doesn't take long to see that there's something seriously wrong Fiore. Not only does she swear expletives like a grown person, she has a knack for manipulation and a sadistic streak.
  • Underestimating Badassery: Both on the giving and receiving end.
    • On the giving end, she didn't think that Ellie was anything too special, but the longer the game goes, the more Ellie proves her wrong by being able to keep herself afloat through pragmatism.
    • On the receiving end, Ellie picks Fiore to go with her to the finale, believing that she would be an easy win over Jake because she's a six year old girl going against a full grown woman.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: Despite Alec being one of her biggest supporters and allies through the entire season, and having sacrificed so much for her to let her get as far as she did, Fiore nonchalantly boots him out in order to have Ellie on the finale with her, thinking that she would be an easier target compared to him.
  • Unknown Rival: In the beta, Nick develops an intense hatred for and desire to vote out Fiore after everyone's exposed confessionals reveals her true nature and, most importantly, after Nick choosing to believe Fiore over Lill caused the latter to no longer like him. Fiore, for her part, can't even be bothered to remember his name. This never happens in the remake, since Nick buys all of Fiore's lies line, hook and sinker.
  • Unnamed Parent: Although both of her parents are mentioned, we learn neither of their names.
  • Unsportsmanlike Gloating: In her own ending, once Fiore is given the million dollars, she mocks the other campers about her victory before the police arrive.
  • Villain Decay: In both the beta and the reboot version of season 1, she managed to play the game well enough to reach the finale, with nobody being all the wiser about her true nature. Additionally, the ones who knew either were on her side (Alec) or were easily disposed if they fought back (almost everyone else). Two years later when All-Stars begins, the fact everyone from both seasons one and two know about her true evil self means she's the single most hated contestant in the cast, with absolutely nobody either taking her seriously or wanting anything to do with her. When she attempts forming an alliance with Jake and Ashley to have some degree of control over the game, her old tricks fall completely flat because everyone already knows what her real personality's like and that trusting her at all is the worst thing they could do. Even Jake, who has a history of his paranoia and trust issues causing him to get naive enough to be manipulated, sees right through her ploy and rejects her outright. It doesn't help that she doesn't seem any stronger than she was two years ago, which makes her fail in several challenges (most notably the fourth one) and causes her to be targeted for elimination. She only gets saved from being the first boot because of Jake and James getting into an argument that leaves the latter eliminated as a result, though it's implied Alec intentionally orchestrated it. She also gets eliminated fairly early due to her plan to trick Jake into voting off Ally failing.
  • Villainous Breakdown: She doesn't take it well when things don't go her way. For instance, when she starts losing to Miriam in the finale of the reboot, she snaps and starts ranting. When she officially loses to her, she goes into an even worse rant in a confessional.
  • Villainous Friendship: While her relationship with Grett is... Complicated, in both the remake and the beta, Fiore's shown to be legitimately friendly with Alec, bonding with him and generally being the only person she treats with any sort of decency or respect.
  • Villain Reveals the Secret: Played for Drama. She takes over Ellie's confession to Jake about her sabotaging his and Tom's relationship, and to add insult to injury, she twists the truth in order to make Ellie seem like the one who thought of the scheme in the first place, turning her into a pariah while she and Alec are given some breathing room.
  • Villains Blend in Better: Through a combination of her naturally adorable looks and acting skills, Fiore spends most of the early game easily making everyone else think she's just a harmless little girl, when in reality she's anything but. It says a lot that it takes a personal error from her for one person (Ashley) to find out, and then Jared/Derek revealing everyone's confessionals, hers included, in order for everyone else to find out.
  • Villains Want Mercy: In the beta, when she's forced to fight Grett during the tournament challenge, Fiore outright drops her weapon and pleads her to not hurt her while wetting herself. Not only is Grett not convinced, she ends up hitting her hard enough to send her ricocheting straight into the lake.
  • Virtue Is Weakness: Not only does she suggest she isn't fond of teamwork, part of the reason she chooses to take Ellie to the finale with her instead of Alec is that she began caring for him, which made her realize he was starting to turn into her weakness and thus he needed to go.
  • Weak, but Skilled: Fiore is a six year old girl participating in a competition filled with adults and teenagers, so physically brute forcing her way to the top is not an option. Luckily, she makes up for her shortcomings by being able to strategize and play the other campers like fiddles.
  • We Used to Be Friends: While the exact degree to which Fiore appreciated Alec is unknown, she still treated him better than others and even realized she began caring for him. In the very next episode after said realization, she betrays him by eliminating him, agreeing with Miriam that he's more of a threat than Ellie, which he doesn't take kindly after spending the whole season on her side, thus ruining their Villainous Friendship.
  • What Is This Feeling?: After telling Alec how she can't leave him behind to fight a giant scorpion, her confessional right after has her question the fact that she was actually feeling worried for Alec, calling it weird.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: As implied in Episode 3, she's afraid of riding a wild moose or a wild animal in general.
  • Wicked Heart Symbol: Fiore's headband is adorned with white hearts at the side, but Fiore herself is about as malicious and manipulative as they come.
  • Wise Beyond Her Years: Being six (and later eight) years old doesn't mean she can't trick characters older than her, with it being implied but later confirmed that she's good at reading and writing for her age. In Episode 5, she's shown to be interested in reading one of Alec's psychology books, though she later suggests it was for her to learn tactics to apply to the season. It's lampshaded several times in both versions of season one.
  • Xanatos Gambit: Both involving, oddly enough, an Immunity Totem.
    • In the beta, she gives Grett a fake Immunity Totem in order to convince her to make an alliance with her. If Grett is eliminated without using it, it benefits her. If Grett does use the fake totem, then it will be rendered invalid and leave Grett looking like a fool, while letting whoever she was planning to eliminate instead take a break.
    • In the remake, Fiore reveals to everyone that Tom found an Immunity Totem and goads him into using it in order to save Jake. If Tom does as he's told, he will be eliminated since Tom has most of the votes, unlike what she and Alec told Ellie. If Tom either doesn't do what he's told, or even uses the totem on himself, that will cause a rift between him and Jake that will make them easy pickings for the future.
  • You Have GOT to Be Kidding Me!: She utters a sardonic "are you serious?" after Will turns out to be afraid of water while in a canoe with her.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness:
    • More or less how she words her decision to choose Ellie to go with her and Miriam to the finale over her The Dragon, Alec. Given that he had managed to help her get up to the final three, Fiore, after some prodding from Miriam, saw no further reason to keep him around.
    • Fiore ends up on the receiving end of this trope come All-Stars, as for the first few episodes, she's saved from elimination simply because Ashley needs her as the decisive vote to get Hunter voted out. Once that's done, as soon as the Magenta Team loses again, Ashley convinces Jake to vote her out, to the point of celebrating once Kristal announces Fiore being voted off.

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