Subject: It's a matter of balance
Author:
Posted on: 2015-03-24 08:44:00 UTC

When I create a character, I look at characters I like. I ask myself the following questions after doing so:

"can this person fit here?"

"how do they react by fitting here?"

Then I look at their past: "what was one major event in their past, and how do they look if it turns out differently?"

And finally: "what can I give this person from my self, without making them a self-insert?"

These steps are not followed properly in the case of a new writer, who often fails to create a character who fits in with the setting, and instead makes a character that does not fit at all. For instance, let's say I write a COD fanfic. If my OC is from the future, is Tony Stark's niece, and is sooo badass that they can floor Soap? Does not fit.

Another thing that is often tossed aside is consideration for a character's place in a story. A character is there to interact with the world. It doesn't matter how good your characters are if you spend so little time on the background and the setting that you can't tell one city from another. If there even are cities, it might just be "generic location" which is very, very bad.

Reply Return to messages