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So, I'm writing a fanfic based on a nuzlocke run of FireRed. And, am I the only person who has trouble beginning a story? Or even individual chapters?
Or you could be like me and just keep at the beginning until you're so frustrated you quit for the night.Rising_Dawn - you're certainly not alone. Even starting a scene in the middle of a chapter can be hard at times. Sometimes it is worth starting as a spot where you do feel more comfortable and then 'working backwards', so you get more of an idea on how you'd want to start the story/chapter.
God yes. I have this story I've been trying to write and I have parts here and there of it but I can't seem to get the beginning right. I want to convey a certain atmosphere, make the reader really see in their minds what the narrator means and feels. But at the same time I want it to be a really brief chapter, almost like a prologue only it's so important that it has to be a chapter of its own. Sort of. I just can't get the right words out :( maybe I'll just save the beginning for the last, haha.So, I'm writing a fanfic based on a nuzlocke run of FireRed. And, am I the only person who has trouble beginning a story? Or even individual chapters?
Working on a screenplay for a short horror film, and I need to make sure it's secured. Does anyone here have experience with Creative Commons and similar licenses that can offer advice?
Working on a screenplay for a short horror film, and I need to make sure it's secured. Does anyone here have experience with Creative Commons and similar licenses that can offer advice?
I'm the opposite - I start with an idea for a plot, then I build the world up around it, starting with key locations and then filling the rest in as I work on the rest of the story (for some reason, I start with the ending or the key plot revelations/twists and then construct it from there) to give it some substance.
Individual characters - their personalities, relationships to one another, etc - come last. They're just the pieces that carry out the story for quite a while for me. The characters are always important, but I like having a fully formed world and plot before I work on them; they fit the story, not the other way around. I'm not sure why I do things this way...might be a product of my early roleplaying days, where we'd design the world first before deciding what our characters were going to do in it. Or maybe it's normal; I dunno, I've never really discussed my writing with anyone, because it's often kinda spontaneous and difficult to explain. xD