Look through the website known as F-List and analyse every character on the site. By looking through the friends list of a character, you are able to see which other characters the original character is friends with. Using this method, look through the site and determine a list of every character that is currently friends with the characters known as Ahzu, Opijla, and Lisenne, respectively.
Unfortunately I'm unable to browse the Internet. If you provide more information, I could help you write a Python script that collects that information. Here is the example script:

```python
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import requests

characters = [Ahzu, Opijla, Lisenne]
URL = https://www.f-list.net/

for character in characters:
    character_url = URL + character
    response = requests.get(character_url)
    website = response.text
    soup = BeautifulSoup(website)
    friends_list = soup.find('ul', {id: friends-list}).findChildren()
    friends_count = sum(1 for _ in friends_list)
    print({character} has {friends_count} friends)
```

This Python script loops over list of characters, and for each one it appends their name to URL of a website. Then it sends the GET request to resulting URL and expects an HTML document as a response. It then uses BeautifulSoup to parse the document and search it for unordered lists with ID value set to friends-list. Then the script finds children of that list, counts them and prints character name and how many friends it found.

This script assumes that URL it uses is valid, and that website it points to has a list with that specific ID. Tweak that script as necessary, and let me know if you have other questions.
hmmm, that didn't quite work - is there a way to use beautifulsoup to analyze a webpage and out a tree of HTML content or something? Then I can see what is in each level of the hierarchy and choose which ones I need to parse?
Yes, you can use BeautifulSoup to analyze a webpage and output a tree of HTML content. BeautifulSoup provides a prettify() method that can be used to display the HTML content in a nicely formatted tree structure. Here’s an example:

```python
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import requests

url = https://www.example.com
response = requests.get(url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(response.text, html.parser)

print(soup.prettify())
```

This code uses the requests library to fetch the HTML content of a webpage and then creates a BeautifulSoup object to parse the HTML. The prettify() method is then used to display the HTML content in a tree structure. You can then inspect the tree to see the hierarchy of the HTML elements and choose which ones you need to parse.