fanfic speedrun: write the scene you want to write and skip the rest of the fic
(same goes on the reader side of things)
I'm in tears đ This is extremely beautiful. Thank you so much!!!!!
the little merman and his prince
inspire by jumpsuit's fic
A Spring Afternoon
Happy 26th Birthday Alexđ§đđ§(I'm super late)
hey, hi, have I mentioned my notes app? let me tell you about my notes app! Iâve been writing in obsidian for over a year now, for fanfic and original fiction/worldbuilding (and dungeons and dragons, and life organisation, and a myriad of other things) and so far Iâve gotten at least three people to also start using it, and I am in fact on an endless quest to get more people to try it.
obsidian.md how do i love thee, let me list the ways:
Itâs offline. you are not beholden to the whims of wifi!
Did i mention itâs free? itâs free!
you can pay to support the devs, or to access the sync service, but honestly I just use a free file sync service to move things between my desktop/laptop.
Itâs super lightweight at its core. you can (and I do) run it with a bunch of plugins and customisation, but at itâs base itâs just text, in simple files. plaintext. readable by anything. your writing is not trapped in proprietary file formats.
HOWEVER you can in fact customise every aspect of it and if you like Making Your Notes Cute I cannot recommend it enough as a Way To Procrastinate Actually Writing
Crucially, you can link your notes. This is phenomenal for not only worldbuilding, but planning, research, outlining and connecting characters and events. You just make a note, type in square brackets, and boom. linked notes. You can make yourself a little writing wikipedia with approximately 0 effort.
I have separate vaults (Instances, pretty much. Big overarching folders with separate sets of content) for my Valloroth project, my day-to-day notes/fanfic, and my D&D game. Theyâre aesthetically very different, which is so so so great for getting in the right headspace for the work Iâm doing.
OH and we have obsidian canvas now! which is a simple mind-mapping feature where you can make and connect note cards, which can also be notes in your vault. I havenât had a chance to do timelines with it yet, but itâll be fun for that. I have made relationship charts with it, and it was great for that. If you like visually laying out boxes of information and connecting them into a pepe silvia board of plot, canvas is incredible
this is a pointcrawl map I made for my D&D game. Those red words in the boxes? links to the locations in the city the players were exploring. phenomenal
do you like split screen? you can have multiple notes open at once in horizontal and vertical configurations, and you can also open multiple tabs in each split window. itâs SO great for research and outlining, when you need like ten documents open at once to move between
finally, there are so many addons to COMPLETELY CUSTOMISE your Writing Setup. styling for tags. kanban boards. LINKABLE MAPS. ways to label scenes with metadata and pull just so many different tables/lists of story information. AND SO MANY MORE. Iâm gonna do a whole post of my favourite writing plugins at some point so i can yell about them
the only downsides are that itâs somewhat clunky still to export things out of obsidianâI copy my fics into googledocs for my beta, and I have a plugin to make exporting to html easier to post on ao3, but itâs still kinda fiddly. Also, if you want a program that Has Everything and Just Works, this isâŠnot that. you can build a lot of really useful writing specific features, but you do have to build them. itâs a sandbox, so if you donât like sandbox-style programs, this may not work for you.
that being said, I do think everyone should try it and play with it and love it like I do and convince all their friends to start using it like i did. come play with obsidian with me! itâs fun! thereâs a great community in the official discord thatâs very active, plus an ever-growing collection of resources, particularly on youtube (highly reccommend Danny Hatcherâs videos as a jumping in point, theyâre super accessible imo)
anyway, come try obsidian!
King Alex The First with his stupidly handsome boyfriend watch me spend the next few months replacing acd with the king for every video or photo i see of mary&george On Patreon the version without watermark and wallpapers!
Wise men say, only fools rush in
But I can't help falling in love with you
Shall I stay? Would it be a sin?
If I can't help falling in love with you
Writing Tips; Dialogue
Does your dialogue fall flat, or feel thin and strange? Does it feel like your characters are talking like robots? Do your conversations sound repetitive and monotone? Weâve all been there. Itâs a very common occurrence amongst writers. Here are some of my favorite ways to avoid the monotone robot characters and add life and movement into your dialogue!
In this post, weâre going to have an example sentence that changes as I talk about different additions. Here it is in its naked, base form: âI know itâs real I saw it,â Nico said.
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Commas and punctuation are your best friends! Use them. Use the crap out of them. Many people will say commas canât go here and they canât go there, but I say, in dialogue, it doesnât matter. If you want your character to pause but you donât want to use an ellipsis because it feels too long, use a comma. Put them wherever you want. Wherever your character pauses. If your character is rambling or talking really fast, take them out. Itâs your dialogue. Use any and all punctuation to bedazzle up your lines. There is never too many or too little of anything if you want it that way, folks.
Keep in mind, punctuation can change the whole feeling of your sentence and the way your readers imagine your character talking. For example, your punctuation should differ between an excited and a sad line.
Here is the example sentence, punctuated in two different ways. âI know itâs real, I saw it!â Nico said. âI know itâs real⊠I saw it,â Nico said.
Can you see how just the change in punctuation changes the way you imagine him saying it? Really hone in on how your character is speaking and punctuate it to show that. (Keep in mind that this is your story and your character. You donât have to obey punctuation rules and writing stereotypes, your story obeys you.) Put whatever punctuation you want there. Use thirty commas in your sentence. Use an ellipsis after every word. If it makes your character sound how you want them to sound, go for it, friends!
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Some people hate reading over-italicized works, but thatâs their own preference. Italics is a great way to add interest, movement, and a characters natural inflection into your dialogue. (I freaking love italics.) Italics helps readers understand what the character is focused on, and how theyâre speaking. Again, people will say not to use it too much or only to use it so many times in a paragraph⊠but the key here is still to write it how you like it. Italics can make your sentences sound more human and more authentic.
Here is our pair of examples, now with punctuation and italics. âI know itâs real, I saw it!â Nico said. âI know itâs real⊠I saw it,â Nico said.
Take a minute and read through the example dialogue, imagining each word italicized one by one. Pay attention to the meaning and context it gives it. (For example, if the âIâ at the beginning is in italics â I know itâs real â that could imply that heâs talking to someone who doesnât know or believe whatever heâs talking about is real.)
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Tags. Tags, tags, tags! Tags are so important! Tags are brilliant for clarifying and identifying exactly how your character is speaking and how they intend for the statement to come across. If you ignore every other tip in this post, donât ignore the tag! There are so many different words you could use instead of said that give life and context to your lines. Muttered, mumbled, yelled, shouted, exclaimed, whined, groaned, whispered, and a ton ton ton more. Use these to your advantage, like an outline for your dialogue. The tag is undoubtedly the easiest way to make your lines come across the way you want them to.
Hereâs the examples with different tags! âI know itâs real, I saw it!â Nico defended. âI know itâs real⊠I saw it,â Nico mumbled.
Donât be afraid to move your tag around, either! Sometimes, in order to make your conversations less repetitive, moving your tags are nice. You can put them at the beginning, middle, or end! (Middle tags are my favorite, I use them a whole, whole lotâŠ)
Hereâs the example sentence with a tag at the beginning and middle. Nico growled: âI know itâs real, I saw it!â âI know itâs realâŠâ Nico muttered. âI saw it.â
Donât forget, tags donât always have to be how theyâre speaking. It can also be what theyâre doing or how theyâre acting, which can be just as telling as other tags. (I use action tags sooooooo much. Action tags in the middle of dialogue is my jam.)
The example sentences with action tags: Nico crossed his arms, huffing deeply. âI know itâs real, I saw it!â âI know itâs realâŠâ Nico averted his gaze, staring down at his shoes instead. âI saw it.â
Or, you can mix them both! An action tag plus how theyâre speaking for maximum impact and description.
Hereâs the example sentence with both! Nico rolled his eyes, hissing: âI know itâs real, I saw it!â âI know itâs realâŠâ Nico uttered, poorly stifling a shudder. âI saw it.â
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Describing the way your character looks, moves, speaks, etc etc before and after the line can further help your readers know how they feel about what theyâre saying. This is especially important if the character is not the main character and doesnât have internal dialogue. Body language can explain things voices canât or wonât. You can explore putting these descriptions before the line, after the line, in the tag, or after the tag. Whatever you prefer!
Hereâs the sentence with descriptive sentences with it. I did one before the line & tag and one in the middle! He was practically fuming, his eyebrows knitted so closely together they looked like a single strip of hair. His eyes were flicking between his friends like he was trying to determine if they were joking, blue irises blurred with a rage-fueled haze. Nico finally rolled his eyes, hissing: âI know itâs real, I saw it!â âI know itâs realâŠâ Nico uttered, poorly stifling a shudder. His eyes never left the floor, and he looked smaller, younger as he spoke. His breaths werenât exactly even, but they werenât too quick, either. âI saw it.â
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Look at those two very different scenarios we got out of the same base line! This is the power you hold, folks, the power to un-bland your dialogue and make it into something intense and memorable for your readers! The power to make it portray exactly what you want it to portray! No more worrying how your readers took that line, because you set in stone how it was presented.
Remember, making a paragraph like that for every line might get tiring or repetitive to read. Sometimes tags alone are good enough in fast-paced or long conversations, and sometimes, if the dialogue makes it clear who is speaking, the line can suffice by itself!
If you have any writing tip requests, drop them in my inbox!
my contribution to the pink henry dtiys đ«Ą
Huge thanks to @pragmatic-optimist for fixing commas, semicolons, vibes, and final sentences and always being there to both bounce ideas off of and listen to me vent.
Prompts from @creativepromptsforwriting
Love Letter- (M) (Word Count: 3,200) WW2 AU
Birds
Snowfall
Dinner Date
Mirror
Sky
Chocolates
Poem
Rainbow
Cards
Dream
Ring
Mountains
Kisses
Cashmere
Dance
Roses
Heart Candies
Gifts
Cupcakes
Diary
Carousel
Watercolor
Love Language
Rainday
Cabin
Envelope
Ribbons
Admirer
Firstprince hands have their own chemistry:
Youâve used dozens of writing tools, and they all do the job, but before you start your next long-form writing project, I recommend you try Obsidian. I wrote the first draft of my first book entirely