Subject: Permission denied.
Author:
Posted on: 2011-11-12 21:27:00 UTC

Hello desdendelle,

I regret to say that, based on your post, your writing sample, and your chosen badfic, you currently do not have the skills necessary to be a good PPC mission writer.

Writing PPC missions requires:

• The ability to discriminate between the mediocre-to-subpar fics that populate a fandom, and the truly, hilariously bad fics that merit our attention. Your fic of choice is certainly not the greatest, but neither is it more than mildly bad. The crossover you chose is not particularly implausible, nor is the characterization blindingly awful. Thus, there is little to no humor to be mined from PPCing a fic like this, and your readers will quickly get bored.

• The ability to recognize unintentional hilarity in written work. This is a HUGE part of PPCing. Unfortunately, you do not seem to be able to find it in your own writing:

- Your first paragraph begins, It was a dark night, and takes place during a storm.
- Your fourth paragraph begins, His mount was a queer beast.
- Your antepenultimate paragraph ends, “Lo!” was all he said, as he mourned for his dead brother.

If you do not know why people will find these sentences exceedingly funny, you still lack the requisite experience to mock badfic.

• A mature grasp of the English language and the elements of good storytelling. Your sample pegs you firmly as a beginning writer. Critiquing the stories of others, as we do in the PPC, requires an advanced command of the written word.

For instance, in PPCing the climax usually occurs when the agents rush out to attack and subdue an uncanon element. Unfortunately, your action scenes are slow and complicated. There is one paragraph I recall where the commander shouts “Battle formations!” and the soldiers obey instantly…and then the rest of the paragraph is just the description of that action painstakingly catching up to the action itself. You can't make the soldiers seem "instantly" obedient if it takes you five sentences to describe how they're obeying. I doubt that your agents could successfully subdue a Mary Sue in an exciting way.

Also, PPC missions require a lot of dialogue and movement, as the agents react in turn to the badfic’s purple prose and inane characterization. Your writing relies too heavily on description, passive voice, and redundancy. I count three uses of passive voice in your first paragraph alone. There are too many flowery descriptions of generic landscapes, and subjects “begin” to do verbs a total of nine times within a space of two pages. This should not discourage you from writing further, but it does mean that you need much more practice before your agents can take the field.

• Originality. This may seem contradictory, as our missions are formulaic by nature. However, it is for this very reason that each new PPC writer must be able to do something unique, not only with the standard mission formula, but also with the constant cliché barrages of badfic. The entertainment value of your PPCing depends directly on a) how terrible the chosen badfic is, and b) how cleverly you can use the PPC framing device to dissect said badfic’s faults. Your writing sample demonstrates a thorough knowledge of one high fantasy trope after another, but there is more ingenuity in the helmet designs than in the new race of beings you created (which are eerily similar to the Na'vi from Avatar). There is nothing wrong with your agent profiles (apart from the grammar), but there is not enough potential for your spin-off to contribute something new to the PPC universe.

If you would like to discuss this further, you can also drop me a note on the PPC wiki.

Sorry to disappoint!

Araeph

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