27 / 52
May 2021

Exactly~ and it's like a lowkey face slap, like oh, you thought you'd only get to laugh your ass off? No. slap. SIT DOWN.

Oddly specific maybe and I don't think you'd expect it from me, but environments? I love describing the weather or old rooms or sparkly new rooms, so much fun. Like, if I write about a cafe I want the reader to almost be able to smell the coffee. My vocabulary isn't spectacular though, so being very descriptive can be a challenge.

Close second are very soft romantic or melancholic moments and boy howdy do I use those a lot in my current story.

It's a face slap for training purposes. SLAP "you should be paying attention ALL THE TIME."

I like writing witty exchanges of dialogue, the snarkier the better. I do like me some action and drama, but I feel most comfortable with rapid-fire exchanges of dialogue.

Haha, I love writing psychotic scenes! When the villain/bad guy has gone off the rails, it's always fun to paint the picture, so to speak. I think Annie Leonhart influences me when I write stuff like that. That moment when she laughed was AMAZING.

Scenes with lots of emotional drama. I love it when my characters have to talk about their feeeeeeeelinngggsss.

I really like writing description, like the first time a story goes to a certain, interesting setting. That's fun. I also like writing dialogue when I've got a clear idea of what the characters are talking about/passive aggressively arguing over.

I love action scenes where the characters are constantly almost getting killed, but also can't stop having stupid thoughts/conversations. Like, "Oh no, I've been taken hostage, but also what kind of shitty warehouse hideout is this? So cliche, 10/10 would not recommend getting kidnapped by these guys." That kinda thing, lol.

My favorite scene is probably when my frames all like end and the reader understands the like story structure I made. It's like satisfying.

conditioned response. The reader laugh because they are enjoying the goof I set up. They are happy, for a moment. AND THEN- the reader freezes. They know it's coming. The slap. The whole goof was a red herring to distract from an important piece of plot exposition. They were paying attention, so they dont get a slap.

I might slap them anyway because i think my readers are "into that" w/e i dont judge

I like to write SWEET moments between my main characters*AHEM* romance

Intense scenes. Edge of the seat stuff. I love to make the audience’s heartrate go up.

Some of the biggest inspiration for intense scenes is breaking bad, Dark and Ozark.

I enjoy writing buildups, similar reasons to @Legendarylankman13 's response

Yeah I feel this way too. As long as I'm engrossed in the scene itself I find it fun to write. I don't really enjoy writing exposition dumps so I'm with you on the show don't tell thing.

Seemingly nonsense at first, but when the reader sticks with the novel and reads through everything, they'll think back and say, "Oh! This was told like how many chapters ago. Didn't think of that this way, and now woooow." I just love dropping easter eggs here and there. Also, I prefer the light-heavy-light-break kind of flow. I want my characters to breathe and I don't want them to constantly engage in fights whether it be physical or psychological.

Edit: @rachurch95 I love your questions! Keep this up! You're making me think and reconsider things that I built for my characters. This is a great and yet unique way of "world-building"

I've come to realize that I really enjoy writing banter. Like, everything I do has some kind of banter, mostly sarcastic / friends giving each other shit kinda thing. Since realizing this, I've started getting really goofy and just putting in vines and memes into my writing lol. Especially to break up some tension!

I also really love to write tender moments.

Unfortunately, while most of my stories have a lot of action, I'm not always the best when it comes to action scenes. Shrug.

Good for you! I always wanted to write action but I'm no good in that stuff.