Our_Lady_in_Twilight
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- May 13, 2025
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I remember at some point last year I tried to start off an adventure with a pyramid tomb raid, featuring an epic battle with a giant scarab beetle. The worst choice of a monster I could have made! Insects, you see, don't react in any sort of way that could be narratively interesting. They don't roar or snarl. Their eyes don't flash with hunger, or betray the first semblances of fear when the hero begins to turn the tables. They don't even really bleed - at best a sword can be made to buckle their chitinous exoskeleton slightly, at which point the beast will... erm... wiggle its mandibles in pain?
This is a pretty common thing, apparently, enough that experienced writers have warned of the difficulties of writing battle scenes against non-emotive foes like insects. A common solution seems to be moving much of the scene to the prelude, get most of the emotional drama from the hero's fear as he hears the otherworldly chittering and stalking in the darkness, sees a flash of something awful scurry up the wall, etc, and then make the actual fight itself quite short.
So how about you guys - when is the last time you learned a writing craft lesson 'the hard way'?
This is a pretty common thing, apparently, enough that experienced writers have warned of the difficulties of writing battle scenes against non-emotive foes like insects. A common solution seems to be moving much of the scene to the prelude, get most of the emotional drama from the hero's fear as he hears the otherworldly chittering and stalking in the darkness, sees a flash of something awful scurry up the wall, etc, and then make the actual fight itself quite short.
So how about you guys - when is the last time you learned a writing craft lesson 'the hard way'?