MadMarx420
Not too sore, are you?
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2019
- Messages
- 443
- Likes received
- 2,490
Fair enough. Not my cup of tea but each to their own.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If my memory servers right, in the Naruto manga the first D ranks took only 1/3 of a single chapter. While the graduation was about 2 or 3 chapters, the bell test was about 5 or 6 chapters, and the wave mission jumps to 24. After this comes a time skip to exams.Author's Note: Chapter 4. I'm noticing that this is way more compressed than the first draft. I
I'm rereading the spacebattles thread, and for the record: I still like it. Just because you're new stuff is better doesn't mean your old work isn't still good.
Sooo... Hinata possibly has some karma coming her way for being a sweet little cinnamon roll?
Sooo... Hinata possibly has some karma coming her way for being a sweet little cinnamon roll?
:crying: :sob:
Looking forwards to next chapter... There has to be rules in the shinobi handbook about saying 'what could possibly go wrong' due to how often it goes wrong after saying that! It's like turning the difficulty up for extra challenge when you are already up shit creek without a paddle.
Time zones are funny things. For instance, in Eastern Australia, it has been Monday for almost nineteen hours. In other places, less so.
Good chapter but this seems like an odd place to end it.I put the player in my scroll and the scroll back on my belt.
* * *
Author's Note: The chapters are getting shorter and shorter as I'm finding it hard to keep up the gargantuan size of the first couple chapters. But, I am really happy with this chapter and I hope that, when you get the chance to read it, that you'll like the chapter too.
Something that acts as a good segue for the next chapter's first action cause the moment it just feels odd.
"Can we go now?" Hisako asked with a frown, looking around the studio with an anxious edge in her eyes.
"Yup!"
Okay yes, xenoblade route on the clairvoyance sharing. Kakashi picked up on that shit immediately, and everyone's taking it seriously. Good. I always did find The Cassandra an infuriating contrivance.
In other news taking bets on whether Daisuke realizes he should further contextualize his snipe at Nichiren as being born from the stress of being on edge, and that he will try to avoid such in future, so long as future concerns he has good evidence for treating seriously aren't dismissed. Counts as having six Cha has good odds on it.
As a tip for the balance I tend to find works best, generally the safe route is to make it fairly obvious that SOMETHING non-obvious is happening, but not to reveal what. It's not as satisfying as the full subtle plot twist, but it's easier to pull off, and the audience is less likely to complain. Isn't as necessary this time as most of the readership is probably initiated, but it may prove handy in future.
There's also more advanced variants like hiding more elaborate twists inside of more standard ones to STILL catch the alerted audience off guard even while giving them fair warning, or throwing in a subversion of expectations or two. The more stuff like this happens, and the more elaborate it is, the more audience will come to expect and attempt to predict it. Train them well enough, and they'll start predicting things you never planned that still sound like good ideas to use later in an altered context.
If I had to guess what happened the first time, the displayed genre of the story generally doesn't have things that subtle, and most weird things happening could be explained as genre conventions. When seeing a pattern that conforms to reasonably to expectations, people are less likely to look deeper, and are more resistant to patterns that don't conform to expectations.
It's an unfortunate flaw in human cognition. We evolved to see patterns and act decisively upon them, because that was a good staying alive skill. Comparatively, twisting narratives literally haven't existed long enough for us to adapt to them on the genetic level, which is why training like mentioned above is often necessary.
Thank you for sticking around until the end of tangential, but relevant Ted Talk. You've been a wonderful audience.
Sorry for the delay, work called. And yes much better.
I totally get the lack of patience. Trying something that burned you in the past is hard. Doubly so when it requires lots of time and effort. Triply so when you're still in the setup phase of your third draft of a story. I'd shout fuck it, and go something more direct, and utilitarian too.
the descriptions of the locations that they were in reminded me of the call of duty black ops zombie maps the prison and the movie theater maps i forget there official names just without the zombies so far
Yeah...it's downright demoralizing when it happens.
I never played the zombie mode myself. Some of the inspiration for this setup was actually Bendy and the Ink Machine.
Very good!
Thanks for your assistance.
Probably, but it clash's with a henge since that basically does the same thing - they don't stack, and the highest modifier would be applied.
According to the books, the fact that your enemies know what you're doing is an acceptable trade-off.
I hard disagree, but I can't deny that it looks cool.