MFontana
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- Oct 24, 2025
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Luci is definitely up there too, but had some strong competition in Awakening.I would honestly only ever consider killing off a main character if I'm already aiming to write a tragedy. I think the main cast tends to be so important that it feels broken if any of them dies for good. It'd be like eliminating a Mugiwara. The damage would be irreparable.
But when talking tragedy, I think of course, that nothing could be more devastating than the loss of the characters you followed through the journey.
Sounds oddly similar to something that might eventually happen in one of my writing someday~ :o Still you did mention that in one of your universes the characters may always be revived, so as long as that is present to the readers they might still have hope to make things right.
Lyn mentioned! She's one of my top three favorites along Lucina and Alear.
Would you say a story like Dragon Ball needs to warn readers that characters may die? Technically the first death of ever of a main character like Krillin's was a shocker.
Also, yes. That IS always a possibility through the Transmigration of Souls. (A major plot point of one of my earliest story projects that I may revisit at some point after finishing the ones I'm writing right now).
I don't remember Dragon Ball permanently killing off protagonists (permanently at least)... most Anime don't. It's always supporting characters only. There are rarely any real MC deaths because Japanese Mangaka know the heavy reactions from their fans.
Also, you can't compare Anime with web novels.
I am merely stating that a majority of your readers will not acknowledge your decision and will revolt if you kill off a beloved main character (especially if it's later in the story and you are past the 100-200 chapter mark)
As someone who killed off a major character (not the main character) in the early arcs of his stories, I have received quite a lot of hate mail, and a lot of people stopped. Those who accepted it didn't enjoy it.
I am merely telling you the reality. There is barely any upside, but there is a real downside.
As for upside, well that's a matter of perspective.
For me, the upside is maintaining the artistic and authorial integrity in my narratives, and this is something that I will not ever compromise on.
Nothing is without cost, or consequence, in my stories, and sometimes that cost is the life of one, or more, characters. Others, it is a massive migraine and horrible hangover. That all depends on genre and tone. So when it is necessary, anyone may die, at any time. Character deaths aren't the end of the story, however. Merely... a transition into the next phase.
No amount of hate-mail, or complaints, will change that. It may be a trade-off, but that's fine for me.