Hello, everyone! You might not know me too well. Or too well yet. I'm not too active on the site - just a single roleplay, which has gotten some very great writing behind it. I am, however, a roleplayer with ten years of varied experience. With eleven years of D&D, now, and about eight or nine years of solid writing, I've had highs, lows, and all kinds of in-betweens. I've even been banned, on one occasion, from a site because of too much "drama". So I've learned my ins and outs. I've played a great many characters, some of which have been put to rest, some of which have just become fond memories, and others which come back because of their legacy.
Then I got an idea. I always get compliments that my writing is great. I wouldn't really think so - I'm just an average joe. And there's different little things I do to cheat. Very rarely do I plan things ahead of time, to a large degree. As any good DM knows, if you have a six-hour night laid out, someone's going to spend three hours wandering off in the other direction. Hell, most of my characters have about three paragraphs of backstory, and everything else goes mucho crazy in the course of a roleplay. And the funny thing is, it works for me!
So. Not to be narcissistic or any such thing, I figure I'll try to give people tips who are struggling. Help them develop more human characters, to a level where you're just the typist, while the character writes themselves. To a point where people are concerned for the welfare of the world, assembling a group that has the potential for great side-stories per character as you work with them, and your characters make the DM want to see more of what you can do and write.
Leave a comment or question below, and I'll do my absolute best to help you out. And, hopefully, help you figure out an easier way to write, and make it truly shine.
Then I got an idea. I always get compliments that my writing is great. I wouldn't really think so - I'm just an average joe. And there's different little things I do to cheat. Very rarely do I plan things ahead of time, to a large degree. As any good DM knows, if you have a six-hour night laid out, someone's going to spend three hours wandering off in the other direction. Hell, most of my characters have about three paragraphs of backstory, and everything else goes mucho crazy in the course of a roleplay. And the funny thing is, it works for me!
So. Not to be narcissistic or any such thing, I figure I'll try to give people tips who are struggling. Help them develop more human characters, to a level where you're just the typist, while the character writes themselves. To a point where people are concerned for the welfare of the world, assembling a group that has the potential for great side-stories per character as you work with them, and your characters make the DM want to see more of what you can do and write.
Leave a comment or question below, and I'll do my absolute best to help you out. And, hopefully, help you figure out an easier way to write, and make it truly shine.
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