Entrance

Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance
Entrance

Entrance

<<Previous                   Next>> (coming soon)

ComicArchive/ About / Linktree

More Posts from Sun-rush and Others

10 months ago

Goal, Motivation, Conflict: The Formula for Writing Great Characters

The recipe for creating compelling characters is deceptively simple. All you need is a goal, motivation, and conflict.

These are the building blocks that drive all character development and will ensure you have well-rounded, believable characters every time!

The GMC Formula in a nutshell is:

Goal: What does your character want?

Motivation: Why do they want it?

Conflict: What's stopping them from getting it?

The GMC Formula:

Goal: What does your character want?
Motivation: Why do they want it?
Conflict: What's stopping them from getting it?
8 months ago

tricky words I always see misspelled in fics: a guide

Viscous/vicious – Viscous is generally used to describe the consistency of blood or other thick liquids. Vicious is used to describe something or someone who is violent. 

Piqued/Peaked/Peeked – To pique someone’s interest is to catch or tease their attention. When something peaks, it reaches its total height or intensity. To peek (at) something is to look briefly, or glance. 

Discrete/Discreet – this is a tough one. Discrete means to be separate, or distinct, i.e., two discrete theories. Conversely, when someone is discreet, they are being secretive or cautious to avoid attention. 

Segue/Segway – one is a transition between things, the other is a thing you can ride at the park and definitely fall off of.

Conscious/Conscience/Conscientious – to be conscious is to be awake, i.e., not unconscious, or to be aware of something. Your conscience is the little voice in your head telling you not to eat the entire pint of ice cream. Finally, to be conscientious is to be good, to do things thoroughly, to be ruled by an inner moral code. 

Hope this helped! Please add more if you think of them!

1 year ago

@themazerunnernerd have i completed this yet

how to become commander of friend group

how to establish political control of friendgroup

friend group organisational structure google


Tags
11 months ago

How to Write Strong Female Characters

Even if you write female protagonists all the time, subconscious biases can make them weaker than we intend. How can you make sure you write strong female characters? Use these tips while cretating your protagonists and supporting cast members so readers admire and connect with your story.

Note: This article is about writing cisgender characters and the stereotypes regarding them. To read more about writing incredible trans women characters, this post and this article are some great jumping-off points. A future post from me about writing trans protagonists will give the subject the space and time trans characters deserve.

1. Write Human Flaws

Women are often written as perfect or near-perfect characters. People expect so much of women in the real world—we want them to be attentive, fun mothers while being sexy spouses and respectful daughters. They have to succeed in their careers to provide for themselves and their family, all while fitting within the feminized constructs that make toxic male egos feel safe around women.

Basically, it can make writers create essentially perfect female protagonists. They handle everything well and when they can’t, they always find an answer to their problem.

Readers will connect more with female protagonists who are flawed. Your female protagonist should get angry, say the wrong things, make bad choices, and put herself first sometimes.

2. Avoid Objectification

Objectification is anything that makes a person feel less than fully human. It’s the scenes we’ve all read and movies we’ve watched where the female protagonist does something incredible—they save the world or take down a supervillain—and their partner, stunned in a love haze, says, “God, you’re beautiful,” before they kiss.

Complimenting female characters like this after they reach their resolution belittles their achievements. It means that even with their brilliance and courage, they’re still acceptable because they’re beautiful. Their beauty is ultimately the most important thing about her and the best way to remind her of her worth.

Other forms of objectification can sneak past a writer’s mind. Watch for these stereotypes as you work through your initial draft:

Describing her body parts as she gazes in the mirror

Saying she’s “different,” “odd,” or “unique” because she does a stereotypically male hobby or wears clothes that aren’t feminizing

Mentioning body parts in comparison to food

Making female characters manipulative for the sake of tricking people and not for any character growth goal/antagonist priority

Creating moments of immaturity that are seen as sexy (like whining being cute or pouting being hot)

3. Assign Individual Goals

Women are often written as self-sacrificing characters. They give up their time and energy for other characters because it’s what people expect of women in real life. Strong female protagonists need goals for themselves. If they don’t have an individual dream that makes them fulfilled or excited, they’ll swim through your plot exclusively for other characters’ arcs.

4. Watch for Female Cliches

Female characters often fit into specific cliches that are easily digestible for readers with conscious or subconscious sexist views. See if your characters fit into some of these common cliches to add the right flaws or arcs to make them fully human:

A symbol of purity: this protagonist never makes mistakes, is always sweet, and doesn’t have any sexual desires.

Femme fatale: this protagonist fills every room with sexual energy, only wears revealing clothes, and kicks ass with unearthly sexy grace.

A heartless bitch: this protagonist is always miserable for other characters to be around for no explainable reason, snaps at everyone, and basically takes on the role of a gradeschool bully at any age.

A pixie dream girl: this protagonist has no goals or arc of her own, exists to inspire other (mostly male) characters, and functions primarily as a plot device.

A Mary Sue: this protagonist can do nothing wrong and solves problems that she’s unqualified to do (minor example: Anastasia Steele in 50 Shades of Grey running a publishing business fresh out of college, where she didn’t study as a business major).

-----

Writing great female characters isn’t impossible. You only have to be aware of how those characters have been written poorly in the past. Watch for cliches and learn about examples of characters gone wrong to make your protagonists feel authentic, no matter what your plot has in store for them.

1 year ago
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9
Dawn Pt. 9

Dawn pt. 9

<<Previous                   Next>> (coming soon)

Archive/ About / Linktree


Tags
6 months ago

STOP DOING THIS IN INJURY FICS!!

Bleeding:

Blood is warm. if blood is cold, you’re really fucking feverish or the person is dead. it’s only sticky after it coagulates.

It smells! like iron, obv, but very metallic. heavy blood loss has a really potent smell, someone will notice.

Unless in a state of shock or fight-flight mode, a character will know they’re bleeding. stop with the ‘i didn’t even feel it’ yeah you did. drowsiness, confusion, pale complexion, nausea, clumsiness, and memory loss are symptoms to include.

blood flow ebbs. sometimes it’s really gushin’, other times it’s a trickle. could be the same wound at different points.

it’s slow. use this to your advantage! more sad writer times hehehe.

Stab wounds:

I have been mildly impaled with rebar on an occasion, so let me explain from experience. being stabbed is bizarre af. your body is soft. you can squish it, feel it jiggle when you move. whatever just stabbed you? not jiggly. it feels stiff and numb after the pain fades. often, stab wounds lead to nerve damage. hands, arms, feet, neck, all have more motor nerve clusters than the torso. fingers may go numb or useless if a tendon is nicked.

also, bleeding takes FOREVER to stop, as mentioned above.

if the wound has an exit wound, like a bullet clean through or a spear through the whole limb, DONT REMOVE THE OBJECT. character will die. leave it, bandage around it. could be a good opportunity for some touchy touchy :)

whump writers - good opportunity for caretaker angst and fluff w/ trying to manhandle whumpee into a good position to access both sites

Concussion:

despite the amnesia and confusion, people ain’t that articulate. even if they’re mumbling about how much they love (person) - if that’s ur trope - or a secret, it’s gonna make no sense. garbled nonsense, no full sentences, just a coupla words here and there.

if the concussion is mild, they’re gonna feel fine. until….bam! out like a light. kinda funny to witness, but also a good time for some caretaking fluff.

Fever:

you die at 110F. no 'oh no his fever is 120F!! ahhh!“ no his fever is 0F because he’s fucking dead. you lose consciousness around 103, sometimes less if it’s a child. brain damage occurs at over 104.

ACTUAL SYMPTOMS:

sluggishness

seizures (severe)

inability to speak clearly

feeling chilly/shivering

nausea

pain

delirium

symptoms increase as fever rises. slow build that secret sickness! feverish people can be irritable, maybe a bit of sass followed by some hurt/comfort. never hurt anybody.

ALSO about fevers - they absolutely can cause hallucinations. Sometimes these alter memory and future memory processing. they're scary shit guys.

fevers are a big deal! bad shit can happen! milk that till its dry (chill out) and get some good hurt/comfort whumpee shit.

keep writing u sadistic nerds xox love you

ALSO I FORGOT LEMME ADD ON:

YOU DIE AT 85F

sorry I forgot. at that point for a sustained period of time you're too cold to survive.

pt 2

also please stop traumadumping in the notes/tags, that's not the point of this post. it's really upsetting to see on my feed, so i'm muting the notifs for this post. if you have a question about this post, dm me, but i don't want a constant influx of traumatic stories. xox


Tags
1 year ago

YIPPEE

how to become commander of friend group

how to establish political control of friendgroup

friend group organisational structure google

  • thezexneo
    thezexneo liked this · 4 days ago
  • thyme-out
    thyme-out liked this · 5 days ago
  • skiplup
    skiplup liked this · 6 days ago
  • willneveractuallypostdeal
    willneveractuallypostdeal liked this · 6 days ago
  • hydrastefishere
    hydrastefishere liked this · 1 week ago
  • 2bananapples
    2bananapples liked this · 1 week ago
  • crazygoateenacho
    crazygoateenacho liked this · 1 week ago
  • weepingrunawaydreamland
    weepingrunawaydreamland liked this · 1 week ago
  • flapjackerz
    flapjackerz liked this · 1 week ago
  • reireibun
    reireibun liked this · 1 week ago
  • misteria247
    misteria247 liked this · 1 week ago
  • ahipsterstylebear-blog
    ahipsterstylebear-blog liked this · 1 week ago
  • capritux1189
    capritux1189 liked this · 1 week ago
  • cowabductionufo
    cowabductionufo liked this · 1 week ago
  • theneurodivergentbookgremlin
    theneurodivergentbookgremlin liked this · 1 week ago
  • gaster822
    gaster822 liked this · 1 week ago
  • cedar1519
    cedar1519 liked this · 1 week ago
  • flower-child07
    flower-child07 liked this · 1 week ago
  • kliphord
    kliphord liked this · 1 week ago
  • thomathings
    thomathings liked this · 1 week ago
  • tangoslavender
    tangoslavender liked this · 1 week ago
  • shrubshroom2816
    shrubshroom2816 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • viria324
    viria324 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • mad-navi
    mad-navi liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • zoraluz
    zoraluz liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • flowers-raccoon
    flowers-raccoon liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • kayjime
    kayjime liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • rosavirgoart
    rosavirgoart liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • choking-on-a-mandarina
    choking-on-a-mandarina liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • mlleemm
    mlleemm liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • zeldis100
    zeldis100 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • curiousreader123
    curiousreader123 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • cabbitt
    cabbitt liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • joyanime18
    joyanime18 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • thesilverchan
    thesilverchan liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • piep
    piep liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • invadernova24
    invadernova24 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • smile2234
    smile2234 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • blupeeblep
    blupeeblep liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • superkittysstuff
    superkittysstuff liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • prachelley
    prachelley liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • legendliz
    legendliz liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • moonstorm558
    moonstorm558 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • radiantarsonist
    radiantarsonist liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • princepink64
    princepink64 liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • colddeanstatesmanroad
    colddeanstatesmanroad liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • thebluesonata
    thebluesonata liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • confusedgoldenflower
    confusedgoldenflower liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • brick-the-enby
    brick-the-enby liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • ddouble-a-ron
    ddouble-a-ron liked this · 1 month ago
sun-rush - certified genius
certified genius

she/her | friend lover

101 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags