The Junkyard people are hard to peg because their personalities are developing. Greg was probably Gryffindor, given Roland's personality and dynamic.
Roland: originally an author, which would imply Ravenclaw, especially as Lokapala was so a geek's choice of name. He ends up a loyal follower of Greg, which would indicate Greg's enough of a Griffindor to drag the cynical Roland into his wake. Given that Hufflepuff's key trait is loyalty, Roland's retreat would seem to veto that. However, was he truly doing it out of cowardice when he hates the idea of cowardice and doesn't show it in-game, or loyalty? Consider what would happen if both the Lokapala's leader and strategist went down in the same attack: who would have led the group and looked after Fred? In a hopeless situation, it's the second-in-command's duty to do what he did. The fact that he did it even though he didn't want to and is unable to accept it was the right thing seems rather Hufflepuff. However, he's a strategist, great with research on the junkyard, can be a manipulative bastard but it's not his ground state... Ravenclaw. It was the knowledge that he had to abandon Greg that won out over his loyalty to Greg in the end, and he sacrifices himself in the reactor because he knows it's a strategic necessity. He's not a natural leader. He hates being leader and essentially seizes the first chance he gets to place himself under the guidance of a natural leader, another Greg.
Colonel Beck's a Gryffindor. No particular brains, loyalty, or ability to manipulate worth a damn. He tends to charge in on what he thinks is right/necessary to save the world/get out of hell and back where he's needed. He's not a particularily evil person, but he's reminding me a lot of the Digimon Kaiser/Emperor. He doesn't get what he's doing, and sufficiently advanced ignorance is indistinguishable from malice.
Madam: Intelligent, certainly. Leadership ability ditto. Very, very underhanded. Slytherin.
Jinana... we barely get to see her with a personality, but she's not a very effective leader: she can't keep her own tribe from trying to eat potential allies, much less keep Bat loyal. She says/knows odd things early on and her defining moments revolve around curiosity. My inclination from the evidence is Ravenclaw.
Bat... sucks up to strongest, capable of good plots... Slytherin.
Hmm... as you're speccing about houses continued.
Roland: originally an author, which would imply Ravenclaw, especially as Lokapala was so a geek's choice of name. He ends up a loyal follower of Greg, which would indicate Greg's enough of a Griffindor to drag the cynical Roland into his wake. Given that Hufflepuff's key trait is loyalty, Roland's retreat would seem to veto that. However, was he truly doing it out of cowardice when he hates the idea of cowardice and doesn't show it in-game, or loyalty? Consider what would happen if both the Lokapala's leader and strategist went down in the same attack: who would have led the group and looked after Fred? In a hopeless situation, it's the second-in-command's duty to do what he did. The fact that he did it even though he didn't want to and is unable to accept it was the right thing seems rather Hufflepuff. However, he's a strategist, great with research on the junkyard, can be a manipulative bastard but it's not his ground state... Ravenclaw. It was the knowledge that he had to abandon Greg that won out over his loyalty to Greg in the end, and he sacrifices himself in the reactor because he knows it's a strategic necessity. He's not a natural leader. He hates being leader and essentially seizes the first chance he gets to place himself under the guidance of a natural leader, another Greg.
Colonel Beck's a Gryffindor. No particular brains, loyalty, or ability to manipulate worth a damn. He tends to charge in on what he thinks is right/necessary to save the world/get out of hell and back where he's needed. He's not a particularily evil person, but he's reminding me a lot of the Digimon Kaiser/Emperor. He doesn't get what he's doing, and sufficiently advanced ignorance is indistinguishable from malice.
Madam: Intelligent, certainly. Leadership ability ditto. Very, very underhanded. Slytherin.
Jinana... we barely get to see her with a personality, but she's not a very effective leader: she can't keep her own tribe from trying to eat potential allies, much less keep Bat loyal. She says/knows odd things early on and her defining moments revolve around curiosity. My inclination from the evidence is Ravenclaw.
Bat... sucks up to strongest, capable of good plots... Slytherin.