carrot
mermaid space witch & franchise trash
This is something I've given a lot of thought to, just as like... An ol' veteran RPer, and as a writer outside of that.
A couple people have mentioned it but I really, REALLY hate seeing boards that are like "every post has to be five paragraphs of at least six sentences." That's unwritable, in my mind. You can't respond to a "how was your day?" with thirty years of backstory on your character every time it happens. It renders any of those small moments around a campfire out of existence. Your character would have had to cook and eat an entire rabbit by the time you finished writing your post and, oh my god? No. Those posts make conversing impossible and slow everything down to like quarter speed.
Some of my favorite posts in all the RPs I've been in over the more than a decade I've been doing this shit have been the shortest ones. Two lines, one of which is dialogue, have rendered me to tears at my computer, if only because holy shit, those few words mean so much. The right word choice and order can just about change the world.
I've got a BFA in writing, and writing economically -- specifically screenplay. Each page is equivalent to one minute on screen, and you have to watch your inches so carefully. If your sentence is just long enough that one word cuts down onto the next line of the page, you have to change it. You can't afford the empty line, especially if it pushes you over your page limit to fit your time slot. This drives me crazy, because I want to have the space for these grand personal moments, but those aren't up to me in the end. Being able to write concisely has saved my skin more than once.
Diction is the most important part of the actual execution of writing (if perhaps only second to editing). Anyone can write five paragraphs. Five paragraphs is a high school essay. To write five paragraphs that mean something, however, is an entirely different ballgame.
Sometimes the one line is exactly what's right, but it's also important to take those scenery chewing moments when you get them. Writing a character death in two lines is heart-breaking in an entirely different way. Great big cataclysms shouldn't be short and sweet either. Sweeping moments of emotional intimacy need some space to breathe. You've always got to know what it is you're trying to communicate, because that's what's really important about a post.
If a character asks "What's wrong with you?!" after an event, you have to know -- do they mean emotionally, or physically? Is there something that happened to your character that made them do this? You have to feel out what the right information to give is, and if that post is two lines or ten lines or twenty.
What I see a lot of, here and on other roleplaying forums, is this perception that length equals skill which is exceptionally pretentious and utterly naive. Diction, flow, hitting the right beats and writing an excellent character make for a good damn post. Nothing runs me off from an RP like a minimum of five posts. Get out of my ass and let me write something that means something.
A couple people have mentioned it but I really, REALLY hate seeing boards that are like "every post has to be five paragraphs of at least six sentences." That's unwritable, in my mind. You can't respond to a "how was your day?" with thirty years of backstory on your character every time it happens. It renders any of those small moments around a campfire out of existence. Your character would have had to cook and eat an entire rabbit by the time you finished writing your post and, oh my god? No. Those posts make conversing impossible and slow everything down to like quarter speed.
Some of my favorite posts in all the RPs I've been in over the more than a decade I've been doing this shit have been the shortest ones. Two lines, one of which is dialogue, have rendered me to tears at my computer, if only because holy shit, those few words mean so much. The right word choice and order can just about change the world.
I've got a BFA in writing, and writing economically -- specifically screenplay. Each page is equivalent to one minute on screen, and you have to watch your inches so carefully. If your sentence is just long enough that one word cuts down onto the next line of the page, you have to change it. You can't afford the empty line, especially if it pushes you over your page limit to fit your time slot. This drives me crazy, because I want to have the space for these grand personal moments, but those aren't up to me in the end. Being able to write concisely has saved my skin more than once.
Diction is the most important part of the actual execution of writing (if perhaps only second to editing). Anyone can write five paragraphs. Five paragraphs is a high school essay. To write five paragraphs that mean something, however, is an entirely different ballgame.
Sometimes the one line is exactly what's right, but it's also important to take those scenery chewing moments when you get them. Writing a character death in two lines is heart-breaking in an entirely different way. Great big cataclysms shouldn't be short and sweet either. Sweeping moments of emotional intimacy need some space to breathe. You've always got to know what it is you're trying to communicate, because that's what's really important about a post.
If a character asks "What's wrong with you?!" after an event, you have to know -- do they mean emotionally, or physically? Is there something that happened to your character that made them do this? You have to feel out what the right information to give is, and if that post is two lines or ten lines or twenty.
What I see a lot of, here and on other roleplaying forums, is this perception that length equals skill which is exceptionally pretentious and utterly naive. Diction, flow, hitting the right beats and writing an excellent character make for a good damn post. Nothing runs me off from an RP like a minimum of five posts. Get out of my ass and let me write something that means something.
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