So I've been reading up on genre expectations--especially in regards to webcomics with their rapid fast pacing. Obviously, all genre expectations are...guidelines you can feel free to break whenever you want. But, was there ever advice that you were given about what people expect from your genre that made you go "Oh holy crap that is so obvious why am I not doing that?" Because I always assume I know genres because I've read them, but...while a lot of it is instinctual, there were some things I overlooked.

For me it was realizing that if I have a large romantic plot-thread in my story--I gotta introduce that love interest before like the 3rd update. Originally he was going to show up at update 12 but...that would take half a year if I update 2x a month. So, I'm really glad that I learned that. I forget where I found it out, but I very quickly added a scene to my script to get that love interest plotline rolling out of the gate.

Another good one I heard, was brought up I think in the Tapas blog -- where a guy who writes gag-a-days mentioned the joke goes at the end. Sounds so simple but how many times have I made a joke in a story or a comic but...then kept going for some reason?

So, for those who have been writing their story a while, what are some really helpful genre expectations (or helpful guidelines, I guess-I don't want to call them rules, because they aren't) that made a difference in your works?

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    Sep '20
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    Sep '20
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The same comedy tip from Lovenstein. I figured out how to deliver a joke before reading the tips, but now I know how to get them to hit for my character whose a jokester at times.