Subject: A combination of the aforementioned.
Author:
Posted on: 2011-10-29 22:19:00 UTC

I pretty much agree with everyone so far. All of these things are necessary in fanfic: sharing the spotlight with the canon characters, adding something, being a good character in general.

To me, it adds up to plausibility and impact. I have to believe that character could be there as they are and do what they do, and get away with it in a canonical context. If the people around the OC don't react in a way that makes sense for them, then I can't believe in the OC.

There's obviously some leeway here, since no one who isn't the author of a canon can write those characters in exactly the same way, and the presence of an OC in and of itself may give them cause to react differently (in an AU, say), but it all still has to make sense generally, if not in the specifics of word choice or writing style. The OC shouldn't by its presence alone contradict known canon—or if it does, the change(s) need to bloody well be explained, preferably as part of the story. "Snape has a daughter in this story, k?" is not an explanation, but "What would happen if Snape slept with someone after Lily died and had a child?" could make for an interesting story. It would probably have to be about Snape in order to work... once it's about the OC, the potential for problems increases. Not that it couldn't be from the OC's point of view, though. The POV character isn't necessarily the one the story is about.

... I am now rambling. Guess that's enough of that. TL;DR, anything can be done well, but an OC's existence has to be plausible and have an impact that makes sense.

~Neshomeh

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