Subject: Re: To you, what is a Good OC?
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Posted on: 2011-10-30 04:13:00 UTC

My idea of a good OC is sort of a combination of what Tungsten_Monk and Phobos said. An OC should fill a gap in the world - a role that conceivably exists within the canon's guidelines, that hasn't been filled by a canon character. A continuum like Doctor Who, say, is very conducive to OC protagonists, because the Doctor is always hopping around the universe meeting new people; a continuum like, I don't know, Homestuck is very non-conducive to OCs, because there are a very specific number of people who are even capable of being alive during the story and we have been very well introduced to all of them. (Admittedly, I am a canon purist; if it contradicts canon at all, I'm generally predisposed to dislike it. I always prefer the "plausible deniability"-type stories - it could have happened in canon, we just didn't hear about it.)

On the other hand, even if the OC blends seamlessly in with the world, if s/he is flat, unconvincing, and canon-warping as a person, s/he's still not a good OC. Being a plausible, well-rounded, three-dimensional character, with actual depth, with a history, with hopes and fears and strengths and weaknesses and goals and her/his own and legitimate reason for existing, is the most important consideration when writing a character, whether in fanfiction or original fiction. Being beautiful and powerful can be part of that description, but there must be a believable reason for it.

TL;DR - Agreeing that the most important thing for a character of any stripe is depth. Fanfiction just has the extra challenge of having to fit in with an already-established world.

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