KinKrow
A DREAM ABOUT DREAMING
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- Jan 23, 2016
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"They're himbos, all of them. Even the women, and the children too!"
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"They're himbos, all of them. Even the women, and the children too!"
Yeah, trying to grow in these different worlds without sliding into complete moral bankruptcy (like that guy Jaune killed in the first chapter) and without meta knowledge is going to be slow to start. It's not like Jaune understands who to speak with to gain unlimited power, and he doesn't have any of the incredible snow balling abilities offered by the WC.
Hopefully Jaune's sponsor gives him the porn powers for no reason and without explaination. I need Tats to grow increasingly intimidated about Jaune'e growing schlong.
So admittedly the way I expressed my critique could have been better. I wrote that at like 2 in the morning and it definitely shows. Also I feel I should note none of this is saying the story is bad, or even that these aspects are terrible. If it was bad I wouldn't read it, let alone take time to respond. So the critiques are more for the points that feel the weakest to me as a reader, and you can disagree. But I do think feedback is important because sometimes what we say (or write) and what people hear (or see) can be different. You as an author have an intent, but I want to give what I get out of the story because it may not match."Someone who by all rights was fated to never fly, yet did? Perhaps that was a rarer, and precious, thing." - Chapter 28
All Jaune has is an extendable arm, a hammerspace, and a little more mobility. Sounds pathetic, doesn't it? In most stories, those stuff warrants a single line of mention at most, before the bona fide MC goes on to gain the power to wipe continents off the map.
Jaune has the equivalent of 3 Semblances.
...Well that's certainly a different way to look at it.
A relative way, in place of an absolute way. A personal way. In the bigger scheme of things, in normal power fantasy convention, it's chump change. Trash. A blip upon the ascent to the top. We know what the best powers across all the media franchises are, let's get to it and forget this kiddie stuff.
On a character level, it is power beyond his dreams.
I pasted warnings of what the story will be in my synopsis, in the author's note of the first chapter, and in the text itself. You read it, drew a mental picture of what it means, and the result is based not on the context of the character, but on the knowledge of all the worlds and characters you are familiar with including ones where gods and demons and more roam the land.
I think, that you have fallen deep, deep into the power fantasy, power level hole, and that has warped your perspective without you realizing it. What you consider overcorrection, I consider working as designed.
Starting from the bottom. It's a phrase we are familiar with. MC gets a gamer system and he's starting from the bottom.
It very often does not start from the bottom.
The MC already has ultimate power in his hand with that system, so things have to escalate from there in the narrative to keep the reader's interest. Powers gained must always top the last, because the threats are always above the last. Right out of the gates, we are sprinting to the top.
Does not a man need food? What hero can go to wage war against the gods without toilet paper?
I put forth a theory, bastardized from Maslow's, that the pyramid of power fantasy escalation does not have to start with OP power at the bottom, and proceed to aura farming at the top. That the bottom when referring to 'starting from the bottom' can still have meaning when it is the point where a person is concerned with the basic needs of living, and seek quality of life improvements. Where even the next meal can be something worth fighting for. Once those needs are met, then the person strives to go higher.
Feats. Power levels.
Jaune cut off the head of an Ursa. Dark Souls lets you upgrade a stick to beat up a god. Combined, would this not mean that Jaune's sword can now cut off the head of gods?
Jaune fought one godlike Tier 8 entity. Does that make him a contender among the Tier 8 godlike entities?
The entire way in this arc, I present a world that, on a fundamental level, is different from what the characters have faced. Bursting with life. Evolution taken to a whole new level. I meshed gameplay and lore together so that you may see what the Monster Hunter franchise is about.
But, by putting the label of 'flesh and blood creatures' and 'monsters' on them instead of 'godbeasts' and 'starspawns', they're apparently now of a lower Tier. An arbitrary ranking system shifts the threat that foes pose in the various different settings, creating a scenario where a character that has scratched a higher Tier must now keeping going higher, never returning to a lower Tier, even if context would suggest it is not lower at all and that the settings exist irrespective of each other. In short, power fantasy escalation takes place.
Personal power.
Jaune plays backup to other people, and you consider that a mark of shame, translating it to mean that he cannot survive in more dangerous places, or 'be of use.'
There's an idea that gets thrown around a lot. DPS is king, healers and tanks are trash. What's strategy, can we eat it?
I posit that the ability to connect with others has a value that lies beyond the numbers. Bridging the divide between strangers, bringing them together in a cohesive unit, is a skill that carries forward to multiple challenges.
Look at Monster Hunter. A team turning the tide against a foe Jaune cannot triumph over alone. He watches. He takes notes. A lesson reaffirmed to him piece by piece ever since Beacon, developing towards an epiphany. Is that not a valuable takeaway? Is that not growth?
Not if growth means personal power. DPS is king.
Character growth.
Emotions, principles, outlook. Why is that gained solely through battle?
I walk through the woods, and encountered a sweet songbird by a river stream. For a while, I listened, and once it ended I wished to hear another song. With such hope, I stayed there for an hour on, watching the river stream flow by, carrying with it the fallen leaves of autumn. Yet, in the end, the bird never sang again, no matter how I coaxed it. I didn't know what I felt then as I left the forest, but years later I looked back through all my experiences, beginning with that day in the woods, and thought "My happiest times are within those small moments."
---an example, written on a whim
Character growth is not one and done. It does not fit in a sentence, a paragraph, or a chapter. It is not a writer stating outright that this is what the character learned, he is this sort of person now. It proceeds in starts and stops, sometimes never expressed. Often, it is the character's journey in the entirety that reframes for them the various components in a new light.
This is my question. You say that 'Part of the hero's journey is their own growth.'
Are you thinking in terms of Jaune's growth, or a nebulous mix of genre conventions that establishes a baseline and an expectation in your mind of what growth is?