#i gotta figure out how to progress and properly draw some planned scenes/plot points for a future chapter
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Void Termina turned around to face Prince Fluff, frowning. This was that one angry blue guy with the big eyebrows who got his arm ripped off, right? ...That could be a problem, and not one he wanted to deal with.
In fact, Prince Fluff had already rushed forward, only to completely miss Void Termina, instead rushing beneath where he was floating. ...So that wasn't a great attempt on Prince Fluff's part. Not to mention Ester and Javez were there looking like they'd just kill him if he tried anything else. ...So what was there to do?
Well, Void Termina answered that question.
He then floated up into the air, beginning to glow brightly. There was a flash of light followed by two separate lights forming around Ester and Javez, bright enough that they couldn't even be seen through it. Everyone had to shield their eyes once more.
[...Meanwhile...]
After flying through a rift, dealing with the dizziness that came with it and drifting through space for a bit, Magolor, Flamberge and Francisca had made it to Jambandra. They started to make their way through the halls, each having a different demeanor.
Francisca was calm and determined, Flamberge was a little more impatient and loud, floating ahead of the others, and Magolor was moving a little slower, his anxieties starting to creep up on him again.
Magolor: "...I know, but...n-now that we're here, I...f-feel this...dread...s-something b-bad is h-happening..."
Francisca: "Well, we need to be strong. For the sake of Hyness and everyone else."
Flamberge: "Yeah! And we'll back you up if things get dicey!"
Magolor: "...Th-Thanks, you two. I appreciate it."
[The focus has shifted back to Magolor, Flamberge and Francisca for a bit as they make their way through Jambandra.]
#Event: Chapter 2 - Seeping Through the Cracks#story#not an ask#long post#do not rush them we needa catch up with them#sorry not sorry for that mini cliffhanger by the way#don't worry it'll be worse eventually#i gotta figure out how to progress and properly draw some planned scenes/plot points for a future chapter#tho it also depends on the asks i get lol. i'm working on it in my brain#unrelated but i hate the tag limit man it's like 30 and i end up with high 20s every time because of the character/blog ones#kirby#kirby star allies#kirby au#kirby fanart#kirby series#kirby oc#prince fluff#francisca#francisca kirby#flamberge#flamberge kirby#magolor#void termina#ester#javez#ask blog#ask-the-retired-cultist#retiredcultistredux#retired cultist redux
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how did you get into writing fic? i'd love to start but idk even where to begin! I loved adats so I was wondering do you have any advice?
Oh my goodness! I am so flattered youâve asked me this. Yes, I can absolutely help. Iâll throw a bunch of rambling under the cut.
I started writing fic probably when I was... sixteen years old? A lot of my early works were oneshots. I couldnât figure out how to do anything plot heavy for the life of me, so I just stuck to AUs or whatever I felt like. I wasnât in any particular fandom -- I really wrote whatever I had ideas for. I remember I tried once to do a plot-heavy story and I received a review absolutely ripping it to shreds. Like, it was so cruel I cried lol. I ended up deleting the fic. Years later, I get what they were trying to say (basically, more substance, less style), but at the time it cut to the quick. Really, it was only when I was in my twenties that I started writing work that was longer and/or better.
The fandom that helped me actually write plot heavy work was a historical-based fandom. As Iâm a historian, it was perfect. I got to use my research skills and knowledge to create works that, above all, aimed to feel authentic. I mainly read historical fiction, so I was familiar with how that genre worked. Miraculously, people loved my work. I think I wrote about ~200k in the period of a year? These were several short stories (20-40k) and a few oneshot filler fics. While I was part of this fandom I also helped organise a Big Bang which was a lot of hard work but was extremely rewarding. Along with that, I interacted mainly with other fic writers, so I spent a lot of time chatting to people about ideas and encouraging other writers, and it just created a lovely medley where no concept was impossible or any line of dialogue too difficult. We supported each other and it was truly like a little commune. I gradually stepped away from the fandom mainly because it was just a part of my life at a very specific time, and almost as soon as that time was over, my love for that story/ship faded, but I firmly believe I figured out a lot of how/what I do now purely through that experience.
Regarding ADATS
With ADATS, it stemmed entirely from wanting to âexplainâ three months in canon (at the end of season three). I was interested in the idea of season four setting up Will/Mike in canon, and I wanted to test the source material to see if I could draw from what already existed to create something authentic. I began with that simple idea: what happened from July to October in 1985? Then I thought about the major themes I wanted to hit -- family, friendship, coming of age, sexuality -- and I nested them around the bigger concept: how do I get Mike from being ostensibly straight to realising he is gay? That meant thinking of two steps: Mike discovering his attraction to guys; Mike discovering his attraction to Will. Those two concepts were separate âarcsâ that needed addressing in different ways. Balance was key to weaving them together and making the reader feel like they knew what was coming (and that they felt smart for putting the pieces together) without just rushing through and going ânow kiss!â Thatâs partly why ADATS needs a sequel, lol: because itâs not finished!
Writing process
The first thing I do when I start to get an idea is I write it down. Sounds obvious. But when you have a killer line of dialogue come to you in the shower and you think âIâll remember thatâ -- reader, you will not remember it. You gotta get it down ASAP! I do that the whole way through, as generally Iâll be thinking of scenes Iâm stuck on and then itâll just come to me and Iâll quickly jot it down.
The next thing -- or what I do in the meantime -- is start structuring. I plan. I try to plan a lot. Sometimes itâs okay to write âand something happens here to get them hereâ, because youâll figure it out later, but for the most part Iâve discovered that planning is like gold and you canât get enough of it. I break my work up into generally 3-4 parts/sections, and I treat each section like a mini story. So each part needs a conflict and resolution, and it needs to flow into the next section. You need to have a feeling of things evolving and maturing. Once Iâve planned those little bits, I start thinking about the bigger plot arc and how I can drop in hints along the way. Iâm probably not a subtle or skilled enough writer to yet pull off that sort of gasping twist you get in really excellent books, but Iâm trying to get there. Itâs hard, is what Iâm trying to say, but thatâs okay, because weâre all learning.
Then I generally do aesthetic stuff. Sounds stupid, probably. But nothing helps me get more into a mood than doing a Pinterest board or -- most of all -- making a Spotify mix. I start thinking about the vibe and the general atmosphere, and then I almost exclusively listen to that mix when Iâm working. Sort of like muscle memory? Just to get the creative juices associated with that particular selection of songs.
Another thing Iâll do along with plot structure is character structure. This is a biggie. I mean, a story is nothing without characters. So Iâll just jot down a bunch of bullet points of characters and particular aspects that I want to highlight or remember. I hate continuity errors in fiction. Like, if someone says they work on Maple Street but later in the fic theyâre working on Pine Street. I hate that. So I keep note of specific things that my main character might notice at repeated points in the story (colours, places, smells, names, sounds -- so theyâre all consistent even as the narrative evolves). Thatâs another thing -- your charactersâ motivations. Not everyone is going to be a huge player, but they all do serve a purpose. The most important character is obviously your main character. I personally think itâs important to let your M.C. be an arse at times. Theyâre going to be mean, theyâre going to misinterpret things or fly off the handle... just let âem. Let them be wretched humans, and then bring them back and make them realise what theyâve done. Let them learn! I love consequences in fiction, lol.
At the same time, Iâll probably start writing. Weâve already written down some snippets of neat dialogue or descriptions, but now we should start the actual process. For me, I used to start at the beginning. Usually this was the most fleshed out anyway: Iâll have a clear idea of the beginning and the end, but nothing in the middle. These days, if I have a scene in mind that I canât forget, Iâll just write it. It will possibly get scrapped or rewritten, but thatâs okay, because at least youâve got it down and now you can devote your brain power to something useful (like figuring out what the middle is supposed to be). Iâll have half a dozen of totally out of context scenes just littered in my Word document that Iâll add to as I go along. Eventually, though, youâre going to start writing properly, and thatâs when you write your opening scene.
Opening scenes: super important. Every time I write a scene I think: what is the point of this? What do I want the reader to learn or takeaway? Sometimes you do have filler scenes, but they also serve a different purpose (perhaps to establish a group dynamic or to explore/describe a characterâs surroundings). Mainly, though, every scene should push something forward in some way, whether itâs character development or a plot point. So, with an opening scene, I always think you have to establish: where you are; who you are; what they are doing; where theyâve come from (in a philosophical and practical sense); and where theyâre going (ditto). That doesnât have to happen in the first paragraph -- that would be silly. But if you sprinkle that information in over time itâll gradually build up a picture of your character and that way the reader can get an idea of who they are. You basically need to give a snapshot of what your story is about. This also goes back to the character creator stuff: where they are at the start should be different to where they end up. How that happens is, of course, because of plot, and because youâve structured everything to the nth degree, weâve got a very clear progression of that characterâs growth (/s easier said than done lol).
General advice
Write down everything: every idea, a bit of dialogue, a description, whatever. Write it down. Doesnât have to be neat. Just has to be on paper. You canât remember everything, so if youâre spending time trying to hold those things in your head, itâs taking up space for new ideas to come along.
Structure, plan, structure, plan. Sometimes itâs boring and I hate it. Other times, when Iâve not written in a few days and I open the Word doc and think wtf is this supposed to be, I am very grateful for Past Me for leaving such detailed notes. Seriously, it helps so much. Oneshots donât really need planning, in my experience. You just get those out there. But multi-chaptered stories really do, even ones that âjustâ focus on a relationship.
Whatever you want to write, commit to it. Space goblins invade Hawkins? Do it. Eleven and Max find themselves in a cult akin to Midsommar (2019) and must escape? Yes. Just... whatever you want to do, remember that youâre writing it for you. Write what most interests you, what makes you when you reread it go AHHHHH I LOVE THIS!! Because that makes it a thousand times easier to actually get on with the writing when you enjoy what youâre doing.
Write a lot. Every day, if you can, or at least at designated times. Occasionally I have a very specific headspace/vibe I have to be in, but sometimes it just hits me and Iâll say to my partner âI need to write nowâ and just disappear, lol. The more you write the more you write. Itâs so, so, so true. Cannot emphasise this enough. When I wrote that ~200k in twelve months? It was because I literally wrote every. day. Or near enough. Remember that some days youâll write 200 words, and other days youâll write 20k (this happened to me with ADATS -- part of the reason I finished it so quickly was because I had sprints of writing 10k+ at a time that only happened because I was in the rhythm of it). Write, write, write. Who cares if itâs crap! No one will see it until you are ready. In the meantime, just write!
Probably last of all (although I could go on and on) is connect with other writers. If youâre struggling to start, sometimes just talking about it can help a huge amount. I hope it goes without saying that you can message me whenever you want, anon or not, and I will talk to you. We can talk about ideas or I can beta stuff, whatever you want! Find like-minded people and talk to them about what you want to do. Another thing this helps is in advertising your work when you do publish. I see a lot of first time fic writers get super down because they publish their magnum opus on AO3 but no one comments. Honestly, itâs because no one knows youâve published! You donât have to be tooting your own horn every which way, but just actively talking about your work and even collaborating with other content creators with get you hyped and other people too (and the input and encouragement other fandom members give is just... out of this world. Anon messages helped me finish ADATS when I was really worried I wouldnât [thatâs the truth]. Seriously, support is everything). When you have people excited about your work, you get excited. Itâs really as simple as that.
I could go on but this is already horrendously long. I hope even a bit of this helps! If you want to chat or have any more questions, just hit me up any time.
#writing tips#writing help#writing advice#answered#i really hope this helps/answers your question!#i can do something more structured if you want#otherwise here are just my initial thoughts#Anonymous
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