Way With Worlds Book 2: Details And Discussion: Way With Worlds, #2
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About this ebook
Way With Worlds is back for round two!
We love making fictional worlds - but making ones that are memorable and powerful takes work. How can we build better fictional settings when there's so many challenges?
To help you out, Steve Savage explores specific issues and subjects that are important to worldbuilders. It's time for a deep dive on subjects near and dear to our hearts - and that occasionally frustrate us!
This book covers:
* Heroes, Villains, and Author's Pets - Good and evil are tough enough to write, but get more complicated when authors favor certain characters or our own cultural biases step in!
* Utopias and Dystopias - How do we make believably good civilizations, believably bad ones - and why do we do this in the first place?
* Conflicts - How do conflicts occur, how can we write them realistically, and what happens when you need to haul off and go post-apocalyptic on your setting?
* Communication - How do you tell people what's going on in your world, without making it obvious you're telling them?
* Tools and Techniques - From philosophy and exercises to using (or avoiding) other forms of media to help your worldbuilding, what can you do to stretch yourself?
* Skills - What skills make a good Worldbuilder - and is worldbuilding itself a skillset or something more?
* Originality - Fruitless quest or the holy grail of the worldbuilder? Why do we worry so often about originality?
Steven Savage
Steven Savage is a biologist, natural history writer, lecturer, and an associate member of the Institute of Biology in England. He teaches about ocean biology and has written more than thirty-seven natural history books for children.
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Way With Worlds Book 2 - Steven Savage
Way With Worlds
Book 2: Details And Discussion
(First Edition)
By Steven Savage
Way With Worlds
Book 2: Details And Discussion
First Edition
ISBN-10: 1544152469
ISBN-13: 978-1544152462
Copyright © 2017 by Steven Savage
All Rights Reserved. The materials in this book are provided for the personal use of the purchaser of the book. No redesign, editing, reproductions, or creations of a derivative work from these materials is permitted without the permission of Steven Savage. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including but not limited to, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without written permission – except for the inclusion of quotations in a review or personal use.
The information in this book is offered with the understanding that it does not contain legal, financial, or other professional advice. Those interested in such advice should consult a competent, properly-certified professional.
While it is the sincere intent of this publication to provide accurate information in regard to the subject matter, the authors and all those affiliated with the publication of this book assume no responsibility for events occurring to any person or entity taking action or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication.
This book is not completely comprehensive. Some readers may wish to consult additional forms of information, some of which are provided inside this book.
This book is provided as is
without warranty of any kind.
AUTHOR: Steven Savage
www.StevenSavage.com
EDITOR: Cailin Iverson
COVER ARTIST: Richelle Rueda
www.FireCatRich.com
First Edition
www.Informotron.com
Table of Contents
Title Page
Acknowledgments
Other Books By Steven Savage
(Re)Introduction
Heroes And Villains
I’m With The Agency
The Deadly Hero
Dark Author's Pets
Omnicompetence
Incompetence
Self-Serving Self-Sacrifice
Forget Good And Evil
Planet Of Morons And The Idiot Plot
Beyond The Planet Of The Morons
Good Places, Bad Places
Welcome To Utopia!
Dystopia Time!
When Good And Evil Collide (Again)
Normalcy And Probability
The Odds And Statistics
Normal
Conflict And Breakdown
It Comes Apart: People And Conflict
It Comes Apart: Conflicts And The World
It Comes Apart: Biases And Bigotry
It Comes Apart: The Persecution Rests
Society And Disaster Moving Faster
Conflict's End
Crime And Punishment
Ashes, Ashes, The World Falls Down
Communication Of Your World
TMI
Without Words
Communicating Your World
The Drought
Tools And Techniques
Having a Vision
Finding Inspiration
God, Darwin, History
Handling Continuity Errors
The Power Of Timelines
A Team Effort
Worldbuilding And Game Systems
The Game – Positives
The Game – Negatives
Skill Development For Worldbuilders
Worldbuilding As A Skillset
Worldbuilding As Skillset: The Details
Pandering – And Avoiding It
Panderdammerung 1: Pandering To Your Audience
Panderdammerung 2: Your Biggest Sellout
Originality
The Smoke And Mirrors Of Originality
Tropes And Worlds: The Living And The Dead
Original Me
Onward Again
About The Author
Acknowledgments
To all the readers of the original columns, who told me what they meant to them and made me realize it was time to rewrite them.
To all the users of Seventh Sanctum who inspired me to do this again.
To Serdar, Scott, Bonnie, Ewen, Jason, Paul, Carlos, Rob, Grant, and the rest of the gang for their support and feedback.
Thanks to my pre-readers:
Julie Soskins for her in-depth analysis and support!
Jennifer McCormick for her editing and catching my mistakes!
Regina Williams for her detailed feedback!
Other Books By Steven Savage
Fan To Pro: Leveling Up Your Career Through Your Hobbies
Convention Career Connection
The Power Of Creative Paths
Activities For The Civic Geek
The Focused Fandom Series
Focused Fandom: Cosplay, Costuming, And Careers
Focused Fandom: Fanart, Fanartists, and Careers
The Career Series
Epic Resume Go!
Quest For Employment
Resume Plus
Skill Portability
The Worldbuilding Series
Way With Worlds Book 1: Crafting Great Fictional Settings
The Pop Culture Series
Her Eternal Moonlight: Sailor Moon's Female Fans In North America, An Unauthorized Examination (with Bonnie Walling)
(Re)Introduction
Welcome to Book 2 of Way With Worlds!
I'd like to assume you read the first book, but it's never wise to do so. So here's how this book series came to be, in outline form:
I always liked making settings in fiction and games.
I came to realize that universes are the main character of a story.
I created a column series on worldbuilding called Way With Worlds in the very late 90's.
I rewrote and updated the series in 2013-2014.
I then rewrote it again into two books.
The first book was on worldbuilding essentials.
So What's Going On This Time?
In Book 1, I covered the basics and essentials of worldbuilding, from general philosophy to focusing on characters.
This time, we're going to focus on fine details and important specifics, such as heroes, villains, originality, and communication. Book 1 was about building the world; Book 2 is about getting deeper into important issues.
Now just in case you haven't read Book 1 for some reason (or if it's been awhile) let's go over my basic philosophy of worldbuilding.
Worldbuilding – An Overview
So here's my basic approach to worldbuilding.
What Is Worldbuilding?
Worldbuilding is creating a stable setting that is consistent and works by its own rules. This setting is where stories take place.
What Are The Benefits Of Worldbuilding?
Worldbuilding has the following benefits:
Provides an understandable setting for your audience.
Prevents errors in your creations.
Inspires you with self-created details.
Provides guidance in creating stories.
Improves your writing ability as you learn to record useful facts.
Can create other useful works, like world guides.
How Much Advice Of Yours Do I Use?
This book's contents, like its predecessor, are ideals you can aspire to. The advice you'll actually use will differ depending on your goals. A fun action-adventure game may not require quite as much worldbuilding as a five-novel series, but going the extra mile can really help your work's quality.
What Is Your Basic Worldbuilding Approach?
My approach to worldbuilding is:
The setting is your main character – your tales are what happens to it and within it.
Because the setting isn't your focus, you tell part of the setting's story through characters. Characters are lenses, providing a viewpoint on the setting.
This approach means that you focus on having a good setting, which leads to good characters, whose perspectives let you tell a tale.
Now Let's Get To The Details
With all that being said, let's dive into details, specifics, and some deeper philosophy of worldbuilding!
- Steven Savage
June 16th, 2015
Heroes And Villains
I’m With The Agency
Your story or game or comic has its main characters, its heroes and villains, protagonists and antagonists. They're the ones you focus on, so they must be the main characters, right?
Not necessarily. Before we talk heroes and villains and such, let's make sure the tales you tell in your world are really about them. You may have a main character, but they may not technically be a hero. Oh there may be a hero in the world you created, but it's not your main character. The same goes for your villain as well – and for all characters.
(As a note, I'm lumping heroes and villains together with the idea of protagonists and antagonists. This is not technically correct, but it's close enough and easier to read. I hope you'll forgive this intentional ethical and literary simplicity.)
A Critical Definition
When you're creating the tales of your world, the main character(s) of your story are viewpoints on the world that best tell what's going on. In a few cases, if you use a first-person writing style, you do this very directly. But just because the story is from their perspective, it may not mean they're the real hero or villain if you have one.
The critical issue is that the heroes and villains have the ability (or assumed ability) to change the setting. If your hero is the main character, the story is told from the perspective of someone affecting the setting. A villain is the same way.
They may be morally different, but both are rather active, even if reluctantly or reactively (in the case of some anti-heroes).
Heroes and villains are defined by a sense of agency, of the ability to act, direct, and change things in your setting. It may not be in a good way, or an effective way, or a competent way. They may fail, but their activity upon the environment is what makes them heroes and villains, just as much as their motivation.
You could be exceedingly evil, but if you're in a coma due to your last drug binge in your lair of evil, you're not really the Villain. You're more of an After-School Special for supervillains. Or maybe you're just a jerk who doesn't change things in the world very much.
You could be exceptionally heroic, but if that results in no direction and activity, then you're not really the hero, are you? Yes, you may be a nice guy, but you're just a well-meaning victim of circumstance.
Sense Of Agency, Sense Of Story, Sense Of World
When you are deciding on what story to tell in your world, if you're telling a tale of heroism and/or villainy, these characters require agency – initiative and direction that has an effect. If they do not act, they are merely acted upon and, at best, responding. They may be main characters, but are not the real
heroes or villains of your tale.
This is a critical definition, as a person creating a world for a story or a game can miss the importance of agency for many reasons:
We focus so much on worldbuilding that our characters bounce around the setting like pinballs. Ever read a book that seemed to be an exercise in tourism? You get the idea.
We conjure up characters, but the story just happens to them. The hero is there, so stuff happens and things get done, but they're not part of the world. They're a camera with legs, making your tale the equivalent of a found-footage movie. This may be what you wanted, but make sure it's intentional.
We spend too much time inside the hero or villain's head and we forget to make them a person. You don't notice how unfurnished a room is if you keep looking out a window.
In a few cases, if your villain is a phenomenon, like a plague, then the villain can lack agency in a human sense. Their agency
comes from pure brute force and circumstance. But if you're writing from a hero's point-of-view and they have no initiative, they're not really heroic (even if they are the main character).
You've probably read stories like above. Someone gets all the hero trappings but never does anything, never shows any initiative. It's boring – you find yourself wishing for an Author's Pet because at least they'd do stupidly overblown stuff.
(If you can write a story where the Hero is a faceless force and the Villain has a sense of agency, please do so.)
Sometimes your main character doesn't always have a sense of agency. In a few cases, this is actually OK.
Maybe your main character isn't the real hero or villain. That's fine.
The Narrative Character
If a main character is not a hero, not a person with a sense of agency, their story may not seem interesting. Who wants to play a game or read a comic about someone who just has things happen to them?
In some cases, people may. I do think this is a valuable form of storytelling – if done consciously.
Sometimes the main character isn't a hero, it's what I call a narrative character. A narrative character is someone who relates what is happening, but has little role in shaping what is going on. It can be done well, if handled properly.
After all, Doctor Watson is quite beloved in Sherlock Holmes, but he's both a narrative character and a kind of secondary protagonist.
Now, I should note that I think truly narrative characters, the victims of circumstance, are relatively rare. Usually they're on a scale between narrative character and hero. The exceptions are usually stories focused on the narrative itself, where it's kind of the goal.
A good narrative character may not be heroic, but they are a very legitimate choice for the lens
on your world.
Some of the best examples of narrative characters are found in horror stories, where people are in the grip of powerful evil. The narrative view shows the horrors, but also communicates the sense of being trapped – as the narrator can only narrate. Lovecraftian tales can do this well, and it's a staple of many stalked-by-a-monster films and books.
Another good example of a genre that uses narrative characters is comedy. Many comedies are about hapless individuals who have things happen to them; the disempowerment is part of the story. Characters in these comedies are funny due to their reactions (which we may relate to), but they have little agency.
Of course, if you have these narrative characters, you have to know your setting, probably even more than if you're writing a more typical hero. The characters are relating what's happening to them in your game or book or film, so the setting has to be well-made. When this is done right, it's a powerful experience where one truly understands the setting.
However, characters evolve, which leads us to . . .
The Evolving Narrative Characters
Sometimes narrative characters evolve into actual heroes or villains – and that's the point of the story.
This is an approach to consider when thinking over your creations – your initial hero or villain may not be what people expect at the start. In time, due to being acted on, they change and then act to alter their setting. Characters who are main characters, but not heroes or villains, may become such during the course of the story.
This is a classic element of many tales – the reactive becomes proactive. A story in your setting may not focus on someone changing the world, but how they rose to become the person to change that world. Their evolution is a core part of the story, making them initially narrative and eventually hero or villain.
Make Your Choice And Move On
So when writing and picking perspectives in your world, remember that heroes and villains have a sense of agency. If your main character lacks such, there's either a flaw in your choices, or you're really writing a narrative character or one that evolves.
Remember, it's OK to not have the main character be the real hero or even have a hero. Maybe it's much more interesting that way, or more appropriate. You want a story of a soldier in an army, and though a great General executed the strategy that won the war, you don't want a tale of plans and calculations. You want a story of a person making it through a great conflict as best they can.
Find who works to let people experience your world the way you want.
The Deadly Hero
So we're talking heroes and villains, and sometimes their tales get active and thus violent. When it gets dangerous, I want to address a rather poorly-handled world-breaking archetype that I call The Deadly Hero.
The Deadly Hero is that character who leaves a large trail of dead bodies, but is also considered the hero (if only by the author and fans). If said bodies are soulless killer robots and such, probably no harm no foul, but usually they're former living creatures and sentients. That body count consists of a lot of dead people, enough you'd expect someone to get a bit concerned . . .
You know the story. It's a First Person Shooter game come to life as enormous amounts of corpses pile up and the character is still considered the good guy. They may even consider themselves heroic and still act the part of hero. After a while however something seems wrong with all of this . . .
Or maybe the Hero is a great military leader, directing armies and racking up victories against the enemy. Much detail in the world, and the stories within, are about his or her victories. The victories seem kind of vicious or excessive though, and it seems non-heroic as cities burn and bodies rot.
Something is wrong because the Deadly Hero kills worldbuilding as well as legions of faceless extras.
The Crux Of The Conflict
So what's the problem? The good guy kicks backside and wins. That's how it works. So why is there something off
about the Deadly Hero – and why does it bother us?
Beyond gore, gratuitous action, and so on, the Deadly Hero acts without repercussion. After a while, their body count is like a videogame score with little to no fallout or impact. A good setting is all about cause and effect, but in the Deadly Hero's setting violence has