Feedback on my new upcoming synopsis

PBJ_Time

It's Peanut Butter Jelly Time!
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Jun 7, 2023
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I thought about expanding my synopsis to show a glimpse of what my protagonist is like. Here's what I came up with:
Too raw to live, too early to die.

MMA fanatic and local champion Hajime Kato once thought the world was his oyster. Now, after his untimely death, he gets thrown into a new reality dominated by a game screen before his eyes. Well-versed in reincarnation stories, he thought he’d witness the usual: dragons, magic, a skill tree, or maybe even some “chosen hero” prophecy thrust into him.

Instead, he gets an open field and a million slimes surrounding him at every corner. Once they’re gone come the goblins, then orcs and skeletons, until he finds himself locking fists with elemental deities on the same grass field. If there’s more to his second chance in life than this, it probably wouldn’t tell him…

{Welcome to Beware the Horde}
Please let me know your thoughts if it's either good enough or too much. Here's my current synopsis by comparison:
Too raw to live, too far to die

Hajime expected the usual things upon being reborn into another world: dragons, magic, a skill system, or maybe even some “chosen hero” prophecy. Instead, he gets an open field and a million slimes surrounding him at every corner.

Once the slimes are gone come the goblins, then the orcs and skeletons, until he finds himself fighting elemental deities in the same grass field. Rinse and repeat every day. If there’s more to his new life than this, it probably wouldn’t tell him…

{Welcome to Beware the Horde}
 

MarekSusicky

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Feb 18, 2020
Messages
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"Okay Banana man, let's read..." slams a red-inked manuscript onto the desk, leans back in a creaking office chair in scribblehub feedback office "Listen, kid. You call this an 'improvement?'" scoffs "Let me break this down for you."

tears a page and circle the start

"Your first draft had a provocative tagline: 'Too raw to live, too early to die.' That had punch. Your 'revision'? "Too raw to live, too far to die"? That's not just weak, that's nonsensical. Too far to die? What does that even mean? Are we discussing geographical distance from mortality now?"

"'Too raw to live, too early to die?' What does that even mean? The original line 'too raw to live, too far to die' had actual POETRY. Rhythm. MEANING. Your revision sounds like something a high school sophomore would scribble in the margin of their creative writing journal."

picks up the manuscript, waves it dismissively

"And you've somehow made your protagonist even MORE generic. An MMA fighter? REALLY? We've got about ten thousand light novels with that exact premise glutting the market. At least the first version felt like it was stumbling toward something slightly interesting."

leans forward, with intense glare

"So your protagonist is trapped in a monster-fighting thing, so why it's not there? Where's the existential dread? The dark humor? The sense of a character slowly unraveling the mystery of his endless loop? Give me stakes. Give me motivation. Why is Hajime trapped? What's driving him? Is he trying to escape? Understand the system? Survive? Right now, he's just a sheep being herded through increasingly ridiculous monster types."

shakes his head

"Y
our original had strong points 'Hajime expected the usual things upon being reborn into another world...' - that's a smart meta-commentary. You're acknowledging the genre's tropes while simultaneously subverting them. It shows you're not completely oblivious to storytelling."

pauses, looks down at the manuscript again

"The first paragraph does have more narrative energy. 'Once thought the world was his oyster. Now, after his untimely death, he gets thrown into a new reality dominated by a game screen' - that's actually got some punch. It establishes character, conflict, and the genre shift more dynamically."

taps the paper

"Your new opening creates intrigue. It suggests Hajime had ambition, had a life, and now that's been violently yanked. The game screen line immediately signals the isekai litrpg genre while hinting at the protagonist's disorientation."

begrudgingly

"So yes. First paragraph? Better. Much better."

mutters

"Don't let it go to your head, Banana man."

throws the manuscript back across the desk

"Rewrite. And this time, make me believe this isn't just another paint-by-numbers isekai novel drowning in a sea of mediocrity." mutters "Kids these days..."
 
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Deleted member 84247

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"Okay Banana man, let's read..." slams a red-inked manuscript onto the desk, leans back in a creaking office chair in scribblehub feedback office "Listen, kid. You call this an 'improvement?'" scoffs "Let me break this down for you."

tears a page and circle the start

"Your first draft had a provocative tagline: 'Too raw to live, too early to die.' That had punch. Your 'revision'? "Too raw to live, too far to die"? That's not just weak, that's nonsensical. Too far to die? What does that even mean? Are we discussing geographical distance from mortality now?"

picks up the manuscript, waves it dismissively

"And you've somehow managed to strip away what little narrative tension existed in the original. The phrase 'Rinse and repeat every day' - are you selling a laundry detergent synopsis or a novel? This reads like you've taken a potentially intriguing premise and beat it into narrative submission."

leans forward, with intense glare

"So your protagonist is trapped in a monster-fighting thing, and the best description you can muster is 'Rinse and repeat'? Where's the existential dread? The dark humor? The sense of a character slowly unraveling the mystery of his endless loop? Give me stakes. Give me motivation. Why is Hajime trapped? What's driving him? Is he trying to escape? Understand the system? Survive? Right now, he's just a sheep being herded through increasingly ridiculous monster types."

shakes his head

"Y
our opening hook isn't completely DOA. 'Hajime expected the usual things upon being reborn into another world...' - that's a smart meta-commentary. You're acknowledging the genre's tropes while simultaneously subverting them. It shows you're not completely oblivious to storytelling."

pauses, looks down at the manuscript again

"The first paragraph of the original version does have more narrative energy. 'Once thought the world was his oyster. Now, after his untimely death, he gets thrown into a new reality dominated by a game screen' - that's actually got some punch. It establishes character, conflict, and the genre shift more dynamically."

taps the paper

"Your original opening creates intrigue. It suggests Hajime had ambition, had a life, and now that's been violently yanked. The game screen line immediately signals the isekai litrpg genre while hinting at the protagonist's disorientation. The revised version?" scoffs "It's flatter. Less personal. Less interesting."

begrudgingly

"So yes. First paragraph of the original draft? Better. Much better."

mutters

"Don't let it go to your head, Banana man."

throws the manuscript back across the desk

"Rewrite. And this time, make me believe this isn't just another paint-by-numbers isekai novel drowning in a sea of mediocrity." mutters "Kids these days..."
That's great and all, but banana said the first one is the new one. So you are in reverse or something
 

PBJ_Time

It's Peanut Butter Jelly Time!
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
263
Points
103
"Okay Banana man, let's read..." slams a red-inked manuscript onto the desk, leans back in a creaking office chair in scribblehub feedback office "Listen, kid. You call this an 'improvement?'" scoffs "Let me break this down for you."

tears a page and circle the start

"Your first draft had a provocative tagline: 'Too raw to live, too early to die.' That had punch. Your 'revision'? "Too raw to live, too far to die"? That's not just weak, that's nonsensical. Too far to die? What does that even mean? Are we discussing geographical distance from mortality now?"

picks up the manuscript, waves it dismissively

"And you've somehow managed to strip away what little narrative tension existed in the original. The phrase 'Rinse and repeat every day' - are you selling a laundry detergent synopsis or a novel? This reads like you've taken a potentially intriguing premise and beat it into narrative submission."

leans forward, with intense glare

"So your protagonist is trapped in a monster-fighting thing, and the best description you can muster is 'Rinse and repeat'? Where's the existential dread? The dark humor? The sense of a character slowly unraveling the mystery of his endless loop? Give me stakes. Give me motivation. Why is Hajime trapped? What's driving him? Is he trying to escape? Understand the system? Survive? Right now, he's just a sheep being herded through increasingly ridiculous monster types."

shakes his head

"Y
our opening hook isn't completely DOA. 'Hajime expected the usual things upon being reborn into another world...' - that's a smart meta-commentary. You're acknowledging the genre's tropes while simultaneously subverting them. It shows you're not completely oblivious to storytelling."

pauses, looks down at the manuscript again

"The first paragraph of the original version does have more narrative energy. 'Once thought the world was his oyster. Now, after his untimely death, he gets thrown into a new reality dominated by a game screen' - that's actually got some punch. It establishes character, conflict, and the genre shift more dynamically."

taps the paper

"Your original opening creates intrigue. It suggests Hajime had ambition, had a life, and now that's been violently yanked. The game screen line immediately signals the isekai litrpg genre while hinting at the protagonist's disorientation. The revised version?" scoffs "It's flatter. Less personal. Less interesting."

begrudgingly

"So yes. First paragraph of the original draft? Better. Much better."

mutters

"Don't let it go to your head, Banana man."

throws the manuscript back across the desk

"Rewrite. And this time, make me believe this isn't just another paint-by-numbers isekai novel drowning in a sea of mediocrity." mutters "Kids these days..."
Lmao, thanks for the feedback, but it seems I didn't phrase my original comment correctly. What you're praising is the new synopsis I've been meaning to use, while the other you criticized is the old one that I still use. I hope this clears any misunderstanding.
 

MarekSusicky

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2020
Messages
154
Points
83
Lmao, thanks for the feedback, but it seems I didn't phrase my original comment correctly. What you're praising is the new synopsis I've been meaning to use, while the other you criticized is the old one that I still use. I hope this clears any misunderstanding.
clears throat
"Yes, it must've been another universe then... Now it should be correct."
 

Tatsuo

An Aspiring Idea Guy
Joined
Sep 26, 2022
Messages
105
Points
83
"Okay Banana man, let's read..." slams a red-inked manuscript onto the desk, leans back in a creaking office chair in scribblehub feedback office "Listen, kid. You call this an 'improvement?'" scoffs "Let me break this down for you."

tears a page and circle the start

"Your first draft had a provocative tagline: 'Too raw to live, too early to die.' That had punch. Your 'revision'? "Too raw to live, too far to die"? That's not just weak, that's nonsensical. Too far to die? What does that even mean? Are we discussing geographical distance from mortality now?"

"'Too raw to live, too early to die?' What does that even mean? The original line 'too raw to live, too far to die' had actual POETRY. Rhythm. MEANING. Your revision sounds like something a high school sophomore would scribble in the margin of their creative writing journal."

picks up the manuscript, waves it dismissively

"And you've somehow made your protagonist even MORE generic. An MMA fighter? REALLY? We've got about ten thousand light novels with that exact premise glutting the market. At least the first version felt like it was stumbling toward something slightly interesting."

leans forward, with intense glare

"So your protagonist is trapped in a monster-fighting thing, so why it's not there? Where's the existential dread? The dark humor? The sense of a character slowly unraveling the mystery of his endless loop? Give me stakes. Give me motivation. Why is Hajime trapped? What's driving him? Is he trying to escape? Understand the system? Survive? Right now, he's just a sheep being herded through increasingly ridiculous monster types."

shakes his head

"Y
our original had strong points 'Hajime expected the usual things upon being reborn into another world...' - that's a smart meta-commentary. You're acknowledging the genre's tropes while simultaneously subverting them. It shows you're not completely oblivious to storytelling."

pauses, looks down at the manuscript again

"The first paragraph does have more narrative energy. 'Once thought the world was his oyster. Now, after his untimely death, he gets thrown into a new reality dominated by a game screen' - that's actually got some punch. It establishes character, conflict, and the genre shift more dynamically."

taps the paper

"Your new opening creates intrigue. It suggests Hajime had ambition, had a life, and now that's been violently yanked. The game screen line immediately signals the isekai litrpg genre while hinting at the protagonist's disorientation."

begrudgingly

"So yes. First paragraph? Better. Much better."

mutters

"Don't let it go to your head, Banana man."

throws the manuscript back across the desk

"Rewrite. And this time, make me believe this isn't just another paint-by-numbers isekai novel drowning in a sea of mediocrity." mutters "Kids these days..."
The rise of a new Judge.
Didn't see that coming.
First one is better
 
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