More of option #2, but I do have an ending. I usually have the general plot of the chapter, but then I'll sit down and expand on the plot, developing it. This type of writing allows me to go in certain directions that I feel how the characters should react to an event, another character, or a situation; it also allows me do think about the next chapter as I'm working on the current chapter(making the comic) and improve some key point scenes that I want to do.
For me I don't write them, I just imagine them and daydream about them like my webcomic is an animated series in my head. How I feel the story should play out, I draw and write the text in the actual work itself while it's coming to me full force lol. So sometimes in my webcomic series it's 1st come and served ideas and tropes I love to death and want to show others through my work and some stuff I think about, if it's a little to much then I'll change things up a bit. So yeah my work isn't really planned all the way out, I just need the basic blueprint of my focus and expand on it to have a story that evolves. I personally want a story that evolves on it's own so planning isn't necessary to me. I feel this route is really for visual people, sometimes planning helps but for me I get frustrated I'm not an organized person and not getting to the meat which is the drawing and adding the text can really get me stressed lol. So I draw and add text while getting ideas of what should happen all at the same time, some are 1st come served ideas and some ideas I feel shouldn't play out a certain way cause of reasons. Again as a visual daydream person I like to animate my series in my head and let that do the work and pick the stuff I like or love and that's it.
I climb up on my table and I squat on my keyboard. Whatever comes out is the story. Its a very messy process.
No but seriously, I get an idea, I write down some notes towards it so I dont forget about it, I then work out how the scenario plays out, find out which characters make sense to use, if not I make new ones for that purpose and then go on from there. It just flows out, Yknow?
How do your own characters run away from you?
And why would you think that you cannot have control over your own imagined creations?
You've created the plan and the characters, why should that not work for you?
This is not a critique on your comment, just curious about your technique and if there's a way to work out why this happens for you.
My characters are very dear to me sometimes its easy to believe that they are actual people. So I start off writing with an outline and one of them decides that no, that's not how they would react or that's not how they would go about doing that task. Other times I think of something new to inject like a reference to a historical event and temporarily changes the direction of the plot. I'm not too good at sticking to outlines and its probably not the best system but it works for me in a way. Its very stream of consciousness and it most likely confuses the heck out of my readers.
It won't let me vote for some reason but I am definitely in the bucket of "Plan Everything"
It does depend on the story, but for the stories I like to write (and read), I enjoy making very complicated plots. Like very, truly complicated stories with foreshadowing and symbolism and just a whole bunch of goodies that require an entire completely polished script start to finish.
And like, there's no rush to get it to the comic phase, so I just take my time when I'm in the prep process, I think the time is important for me in debating if I like this story enough to draw for years and years.
Like IMO I really enjoy the process of research and writing and rewriting. Drawing is such a physically taxing (and painful when the carpel tunnel hits) process, that I don't want to have any panels that don't need to be there, or any chapters that don't need to be drawn. I'm a huge fan of editing your art in your comic to the bare minimum of what you need to be appealing (maybe too much) and the only way you can know what isn't necessary is to know the whole story.
But some stories don't require complicated plots. Especially if they are zero plot wonders that are just environmental and aesthetic. Those don't require really that much planning.
I started my comic with a more detailed plan and outline but as the series goes on I made A LOT of changes, if you see the outline when I first started the comic over 4 years ago then it's a very different comic from now. The changes I'm talking about are mostly character focused, I feel like as my writing developed I found better ways to portray my characters and their stories so I made changes to the scenes I'm storyboarding, then I realised these changes would affect things in the future so I made changes to the writing in future chapters. My basic outline is still in tact and I have an ending in mind.
I think this approach has it's pros and cons, there are a lot of changes I wish I could have done to the start of the comic so that I'm able to foreshadow more or realize certain side-characters wouldn't be as important later on and I wouldn't introduce them at all. However I feel like I'm currently making a much better comic than what I would have made if it were my previous outline and I'm happy with it! Although the only reason this is working out for me is because my plot is extremely simple and it's really more of a character focused story, where I'm able to change it and I wouldn't end up with plot-holes because there really isn't a huge "plot".
Why does that happen? How do your characters have a say in what you write? Even if you may feel like the characters are real, it is still your mind that’s thinking all of it up.
If your writing, as you state, may be confusing to your readers, they would probably not want to read anymore and move on to other writers’ works that don’t confuse them.
That's a fair criticism though I suppose that changing my process would be a challenge for me. Having characters that seem real and going off-script helps me enjoy writing and I write because I love too. Having a regiment reminds me of my college papers for which I had overly detailed outlines that I stuck to religiously. I was good at it but I didn't enjoy it much. As for my readers, I know I'm a bit of an acquired taste so for my few faithful fans I would rather put out a stable stream of updates than to unscheduled posts that I would have to force myself to write. I hope this answers your question, if it doesn't just remember my state of mind: it gets weird in here!