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The First Step - OP Structure
The opening post is one of the most important and crucial steps in an RP life, in my opinion.
It delivers the settings, genre, theme and direction of the RP. It is the first thing a possible player will read, and it will most likely be the deciding factor whether to join the RP or not. The opening post can also be used as a database to hold information about areas and locations in the RP, it can be used as a reference point for players to use as they write their posts. This is most useful when having a RP in a setting few or none knows about, whether because they are made up or from a very unknown source. I thought it would be interesting to hear the tips and thoughts people in this community have on how the OP should function, what detail should it hold and how they prefer to build theirs. Of course there is a big difference between a Pokémon or a known setting in general and a settings no one knows about, so there would be many views depending on that. |
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To add something minor, I personally like to write my opening post in a way that the tone or mood of it is reflective of the role-play, as opposed to starkly listing off facts and objectives. Visual aesthetic plays a part in that for me as well. |
I agree with Jauntier, that I really want to set the tone for the RP though the OP. It doesn't need overly flashy css, it just needs to be laid out or formatted in a way that reflects what you want the RP to be like imo. I often made my pokemon journey RPs very colorful and adventurous kinda, with images and whatnot. It usually suits the RP c:
I often include some kind of "mechanics" section. Not quite rules, but also not background/lore. Just how the players should play the game, pretty much. |
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Tell you what. In my first Meta Journey event, I won't use any css for the OP, but I'll still try to make it look really good. Challenge accepted? (; |
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http://i.imgur.com/HnkJzue.gif |
like jauntier and adventure stated above i believe you answered your own question my friend :)
as for the whole css thing i agree with both of you guys. the op needs to be formatted well (which css can do) but it doesn't necessarily need css to look nice and neat. |
For me, the OP must have all important information. History, plot, players, SU sheet, and where the RP is already in case SU's are opened again midway in the RP.
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Are there any good examples of OPs? I would like to examine the style and things people have done, good examples for both css heavy and barely css ops would really help to give ideas. Of course that examples of things you would prefer to be done otherwise would help as well.
I'm thinking about starting to work on a RP, and trying to gather as much knowledge as I can. |
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If you have a lot of information for your role-play (and you should), it seriously behooves you to at least distinguish your sections in a way that is easy on the eyes, flows, and can be easily discerned through a quick skim. A wall of text where the only thing distinguishing headers and body paragraphs is a bold font will be considered a daunting read and can easily be off-putting to the point that someone skimming may be disinterested because key information is not readily available to them.
Meta Journey's Hub uses minimal CSS (colored headings and padding) and information is easy to find in clearly labeled and separate sections. Cornered On The Market has a lot of information to portray: the OOC overview of the role-play in the first post, and in the second, IC information in one portion and art stuffs in another. All three things are separated and are easily distinguishable from one another through various means (portion header, color-coordinated). In addition, information within each portion is clearly separated, and for convenience, the portion header has targeted links that take you to a specific section of that portion for easy in-page navigation. While it could be considered a more advanced code for CSS, it is not necessary as it is for the sake of convenience. Those are two opposite ends of the spectrum, but they both accomplish the same thing effectively. Even your Demonic Core interest check utilizes CSS in a simple but elegant way, and makes it more appealing to read. As the Game Master, your OP needs to be accessible to everyone, and that does involve formatting. |
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