How involved will he be?
And what is it with you Americans and your sweeping, galaxy-wide storylines?

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Don't ask me, I wanted to bury this one but Halo insisted so here we are.Jagtai wrote: Sun Jun 23, 2024 9:03 pm That's fine.
How involved will he be?
And what is it with you Americans and your sweeping, galaxy-wide storylines?![]()
Pryde wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 2:07 am Don't ask me, I wanted to bury this one but Halo insisted so here we are.![]()
Trying to focus on just the one right now and get it done, but I can't get out of my own head.Jagtai wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 12:02 pm Same, I'm much more interested in what makes people tick these days.
I still have some Mary Sues, though
First chapter? I have started 100+ books that never got anywhere
Oddly enough, that's one of the bad habits I needed to break. Well... learn not to do, anyway. I never really did spend a lot of time describing things either, but I'd always conisdered that a failing and not a vitue. But after listening to the advice of more successful authors it turns out in most cases less is more. The reader is never going to see the scene exactly how you picture it, so it's better to just give them enough and let them run with their own imagination. Think Sanderson, he rarely ever stops to describe the scene. Literally just gives you the bare minimum most of the time. If the description of a room goes on for a page or more it should probably be trimmed down to at least a paragraph. Unless there is something about the description that is super important and integral to the story.Jagtai wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 1:12 pm I'm a better writer now, but I still write my scenes as if everyone can see them. I'm trying to add more details, but...
...I wanna get to the action (which may just be a conversation, but still) - not explain that the tree was tall, and old, and green with a bit of brown because the autumn was closing in, and...
...use your damn imagination already!
That said, I know that I need to describe things. I just suck at it.
I have characters like that myself. Granted, most of them won't be brought over (my Sith lords will stay in the past), but I'm considering reviving Subject 911 - easily my most Mary Sue-ish character. But my interest is in her psychological and mental development - even if she could wade through armies and still function, that was never the point.Halomek wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 2:07 pm Mary Sue is a term that tends to get overused, IMO. A character can be powerful without being a Mary Sue.
All of my characters have flaws, even Kalja Sairu - who I'll admit most often treads the line of being a Mary Sue, but she's also the character I've probably inflicted the most trauma on. She's been forced to watch friends and family die in front of her on multiple occasions, been kidnaped, depowered, possessed, had her power misused, nearly killed, and forced into impossible choices that result in the deaths of hundreds or millions (at least three times).
She's also the longest running character I have. Just trying to write out her history for her wiki article is making it one of the longest entries on the site.![]()
Yeah, I read somewhere that it is a chinese concept - give a basic description and let the readers imagination do the rest. I'd like to get better at descriptions, but I would never use a whole page. Descriptions are for building the scene, nothing more. The characters are what really matters.Pryde wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 6:39 pm Oddly enough, that's one of the bad habits I needed to break. Well... learn not to do, anyway. I never really did spend a lot of time describing things either, but I'd always conisdered that a failing and not a vitue. But after listening to the advice of more successful authors it turns out in most cases less is more. The reader is never going to see the scene exactly how you picture it, so it's better to just give them enough and let them run with their own imagination. Think Sanderson, he rarely ever stops to describe the scene. Literally just gives you the bare minimum most of the time. If the description of a room goes on for a page or more it should probably be trimmed down to at least a paragraph. Unless there is something about the description that is super important and integral to the story.
I'd focus on a few specific details, ideally anything that triggers one of the five senses. Sight and sound often get over used, though, touch is nice, smell is better and if you can work in taste do it. But yea, there's a few handy writer's tools online that will break down all your descriptions and tell you how many you have involving sight, sound, touch, taste, smell, etc. Supposed to help you vary your descriptions so they don't get stale, that's what's important. Not "more," but "varied" description.
To be fair, I created an OOC to address the board so none of what happened during the War of Darkness with the Charon would be a surprise. I also picked Alsakan because not many people would miss it even though it would be considered important in-universe. I also recall you wiped out Fuller on your own to help with the War of Darkness storyline, Jag.Jagtai wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 8:43 pm I don't have a problem with powerful characters, except when their power becomes a crutch and the focus - then they become Mary Sues. I DO have an issue with the "we must have a galaxy-level threat" nonsense we always used to have. We've lost several planets to Sivter, we lost Korriban to the DSIII, and what not. Most of it wasn't needed IMHO.
Overused incorrectly and often. I don't know if I would classify any of the characters we've written here as Mary Sues, even back in my heyday when a lot of my characters tended to be just a little bit OP. Like they weren't perfect, Caitlyn was argumentative and quick to temper, Isis was impulsive and reckless, Adrian kept secrets, even away from family. These are not the qualities of a Mary Sue. Mary Sues are perfect, absolutely flawless, loved by everyone and completely uninteresting. ><Halomek wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 2:07 pm Mary Sue is a term that tends to get overused, IMO. A character can be powerful without being a Mary Sue.
I know that I offered Fuller, but that was partly to change up the BSC, which was mainly driven by a need to expand - I wanted to change that, make it more character-driven.Halomek wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 10:23 pm To be fair, I created an OOC to address the board so none of what happened during the War of Darkness with the Charon would be a surprise. I also picked Alsakan because not many people would miss it even though it would be considered important in-universe. I also recall you wiped out Fuller on your own to help with the War of Darkness storyline, Jag.![]()
I've always tried to make any violence caused by my villains to have some meaning beyond senseless destruction. The massacre on Vorzyd V was not only one of the lowest points in Kalja Sairu's life, but it also resulted in the death of Elena Connor's family - putting her on a path of vengeance for the rest of the War of Darkness. The Battle of Alsakan humbled the big two and several other factions into uniting together into eventually stopping Sivter. The Alsakan battle also has a wonderful duel of intellects between Sivter and Garrett Granth as the two try to outsmart each other that pays off later during the Battle of Mon Calamari.
The fun thing about Sivter is he always made things personal with whoever ran afoul of him. He was always more interested in turning others to the Dark Side rather than outright killing them which I think helped get other members more invested in the War of Darkness as opposed to some of the other galaxy-level threats that popped up in Legends. It's also why his ultimate defeat/death during the Battle of Arcanix was so cathartic - it was literally years in the making.
Oh, me too. I've had it easy, so it's really difficult to come up with ways to challenge my characters, too.Pryde wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 9:52 pm Internal conflict is still something I struggle with. Sometimes it feels like my life has been too idyllic, like I just haven't lived enough to be able to come up with ideas for ghost events to scar my characters. ><
If you want true weirdness, we started that in 2007/2008. In Fall 2008 I met my now ex, named Caitlin (peayitforward on here), had a rough initial go of it because of how we interacted and we later adopted a cat we found abandoned (Selena).Pryde wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 11:19 pm For real, though, some of the arguments Caitlyn and Akain got into stressed me out IRL. Talk about method role play.![]()
I've always taken it to mean that good story development comes when you give a character a dilemma to solve, but that you don't make it too easy for them. The reward (or sometimes punishment) that follows after the dilemma is taken care of will feel more earned. As such I've thrown a lot of rocks at a lot of my characters.The writer's job is to get the main character up a tree, and then once they are up there, throw rocks at them.
Halomek wrote: Tue Jun 25, 2024 3:06 pm That's pretty crazy, but they say to write what you know, Mir.![]()
My favorite way to look at character development is a quote from Vladimir Nabokov:I've always taken it to mean that good story development comes when you give a character a dilemma to solve, but that you don't make it too easy for them. The reward (or sometimes punishment) that follows after the dilemma is taken care of will feel more earned. As such I've thrown a lot of rocks at a lot of my characters.The writer's job is to get the main character up a tree, and then once they are up there, throw rocks at them.
Kalja Sairu has probably had it the worst when it comes to rock throwing. Although it did have an interesting effect with how other members saw her. Her addition to the Jedi Council and her promotion to Jedi Master was entirely out of my hands. IIRC, I think Coron nominated her to be a member of the council because of the writing I did with her in his threads. Then Shaggy had Daer'Gunn grant her the title of Master because of how active she was as a Jedi Council member.
It took me like 40 minutes to read these posts. Come into work and it's like go, go, go. Ugh, I hate cruise season. ><Jagtai wrote: Tue Jun 25, 2024 7:48 pm I feel that I've never been a very good writer. I'm bad at descriptions (or at least I thought so), and not very good at character conflict. At least my characters are (well, tend to be) interesting (I think).
The 'conflict' was always external - thrust into a war or battle - and never focused on the characters themselves. Conflict only really worked when I wrote with someone else.
I think I'm getting/have gotten better, though.
Seems like a lot for an ability that literally made Bastila special because only she could do it.Halomek wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2024 4:30 pm Technically there are a few other Jedi in our Legends canon that list Battle Meditation on their wiki entries, but currently none of their creators are writing in Legacy - so it's basically moot.
Bastila Shan was only one of many Jedi who could use Battle Meditation, so it wouldn't be unprecedentedPryde wrote: Sun Jun 30, 2024 4:45 pmSeems like a lot for an ability that literally made Bastila special because only she could do it.Halomek wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2024 4:30 pm Technically there are a few other Jedi in our Legends canon that list Battle Meditation on their wiki entries, but currently none of their creators are writing in Legacy - so it's basically moot.![]()
Halomek wrote: Sun Jun 30, 2024 5:08 pm Are you suggesting that our Legends canon was rife with power creep?![]()
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