Subject: *winces* I'm going up against a Respetable Person again...
Author:
Posted on: 2010-10-08 21:45:00 UTC
Mission-writing guides aren't a substitute; they're a supplement, and they serve a very valuable purpose.
1. Reading missions doesn't always let the reader know all of the work that goes on, as it were, behind the scenes. It doesn't really explain exactly what type of badfic makes a good mission, or how long something should be, or general points of etiquette (like the DBS's "you can't charge for using a kink that disturbs you" rule), or how things like co-writes are organized.
2. Mission-writing guides help to organize and articulate what you've learned. How many of us have ever been in a situation where we can look at something and say "That's right," and look at something else and say "That's wrong," without ever being able to say what really makes the difference? And reading more doesn't always fix that; it can make it easier to tell what's right from what's wrong, but it doesn't mean we learn to articulate the difference. The guides are an enormous help with that. They let us know how to reach our goals.
3. As galenfea pointed out, what if the issue didn't come up in something we read? The PPC is sort of... big. It'd be pretty hard to read the entire thing in just a month. This prevents misunderstandings wherein a part of our story contradicts something from a fandom we don't know, or a department we don't like, or an Agent we haven't heard of because their owner dropped off the board three years before we arrived.
4. So, you're a writer. You're fairly new at this, you're nervous, you're scared of doing something wrong, and you are utterly stuck at this one point. You're sure someone else has had this problem, but you haven't seen it yet. Which would you rather do: Spend three weeks frantically combing missions, trying to find one with a similar situation, or check the mission-writing guide and carry on?
5. It calms the nerves. Mission-writing can be daunting; it can be amazingly soothing to have a helpful little list of advice to check whenever that little voice at the back of your head announces "You're doing it wrong!"
Frankly, I think it's pretty unfair to assume that everyone who uses a mission-writing guide is too lazy and stupid to read missions. It's a hurtful and groundless accusation. Yes, you and the other Oldies got by without them, but why make every last PPCer re-invent the wheel?