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Jun 2021

What is your writing process?

With me I like to make complicated stories that start off simple. I am going to be introducing more and more characters later on in the story so I need to keep tabs on them. I have a big white board that acts like a mind map for my characters and their relations with each other. I also like to have my editor nearby so I can bounce information between him and myself.
The thing I need the most, however, is music, it sets the tone for the scene I am writing and if I don't have the appropriate music I don't get a feel for the scene. I am writing a dark and mysterious story at the moment so I am listening to music from the game silent hill. Extremely Atmospheric. And also bands like Lucid Planet (Very underground).

TLDR: My process is this: White board containing a mind map of the characters and their whereabouts, someone to bounce information between and act out dialogue scenes with; while music plays in the background.

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    May '21
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    Jun '21
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i just panzer along right now. I know the beginning and ending I want. but i am trying out scene by scene outline. I can't see to do structure and typical outline.

You are a discovery writer then. Which is a fantastic thing to be. Can make your story more organic that way.
I however structure it out in the beginning but if there is something that I discover while writing that feels better I go in that direction. Off of the structure set in place beforehand.

I really don't have a structure or even a method, I usually don't have a plot or script either, I like to surprise myself just as much as I surprise my readers. Jotting down as I go along, every few months I go back on older books and fix up things.

In the beginning, I only thought about one thing: my MC. Followed by worldbuilding because I wanted to create a world that will dictate her adventures and how strong she becomes over time. I wanted to visualize how my characters looked like firstly by searching for pictures that match them. The places as well.
I'm also a pantser because I know the beginning and the end of my novel. I do my best to maintain it that way.

Mine is extremely character-focused. I tend to stumble upon an idea or a concept I like - usually triggered by an interaction between two characters - and daydream from there. Usually for weeks. I'll come up with extra scenes, conversations I find funny or poignant, and once I have enough of those, I'll figure out a structure and a plot to build around them.

From there, it's just a matter of polishing rough edges. Making sure the plot flows well, and that all the conversations feel well-placed.

I work from Macro and Micro. I find out the outer limits of my story and world and build from the inside out. I develop the setting to fit my initial ideas for the story and then I finish up the characters using all the information I created from developing the world

I find dialogue the easiest thing to write! It's partly why I'm making a comic, not a novel. That said, I can't imagine my process would be any different were I writing a novel; the only difference would be that I'd be illustrating around my dialogue fragments with words, rather than pictures.

Well I'm still working through my own workflow but currently:
- I have a general idea of what kind of story it'll be (adventure, mystery, psychological, etc)
- Then I move on to figuring out if there are any important conflicts in the world ( is there a war going on, is a war about to start?, Where does this all take place?)
- Develop characters and their backstories
Then the rest of the story is the characters' interaction. Each of their goals going against each other or working together.

I'm currently publishing this novel

21 days later

My writing process starts off with -

What do I wanna read?

Then, I create a character. I always create a character before the plot, weirdly enough. With my character's goal in mind, I pick a genre, and then the story sort of write itself.

As I'm writing, I think about the overarching plot, how it ends, and what I want readers to take from my story.