What are the stuff that are needed to considered while writing in third person pov.

Shido_kun

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I’ve always preferred writing in first person because it feels more personal and immersive to me. However, I found it limiting in terms of perspective and narrative freedom.
After doing some research and reading other novels, I noticed that many of them were written in third person—and they handled it beautifully.
Because of that, I’ve decided to write in third person as well. Do you have any tips or important things I should keep in mind while writing in third-person POV?

Novel
 
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Genesis_King

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While writing a third-person pov writers may tend to break the fourth wall in excitement or while explaining stuff. If it is allowed in your novel then okay, or else please be mindful. Also follow show more than telling, instead of telling how the character is feeling express half in his thoughts and half in actions. And all the best for your journey.
 

rileykifer

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Be careful not to head hop. (Jumping between different POVs within a scene. Very disorienting for readers.) Pick one character's POV, and stick with it for the entire scene. If you're doing multiple POV, it's best to give a line break between the scenes as a marker, or start them on a new chapter.
 

AstreiaNyx

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Be careful not to head hop. (Jumping between different POVs within a scene. Very disorienting for readers.) Pick one character's POV, and stick with it for the entire scene. If you're doing multiple POV, it's best to give a line break between the scenes as a marker, or start them on a new chapter.
Head hopping is not wrong. It can be done naturally in third-person omniscient. What you’re describing is third-person limited. Personally, I prefer limited, it’s closest to first person but with added flexibility.
 

Eldoria

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What is third-person POV? Limited third-person POV or omniscient third-person POV? Each has its advantages and disadvantages.

In limited third-person POV, the MC's experience is more subjective and feels immersive because the reader can often feel what the MC feels on a sensory level. The distance between the MC and the reader is very close.

Unfortunately, limited third-person POV does not paint an objective picture, making it difficult to implement for macro-scale scenes such as viewing a battlefield from above. An example of fiction that uses limited third-person POV is A Song of Ice and Fire.

Next, omniscient third-person POV is more flexible, the narrator can switch from one character to another and even describe the world objectively, suitable for macro-scale scenes.

Unfortunately, this POV is less immersive. The reader is usually just an outside observer watching the scene like a cinematic film. An example of fiction that uses omniscient third-person POV is LOTR.

Which is better?! It depends on your narrative needs. If narrated well, both POVs can be equally powerful and impactful.

Edit:
In limited third POV, the narrator follows the MC and shows what the MC is experiencing 'subjectively'. The reader can feel the MC's breath without becoming the MC.

In omniscient third POV, the narrator acts as a camera that shows the scene 'objectively' like a film director who directs what the audience can see from a scene? The reader feels like a cinematic film audience.
 
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lerasycamore

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I'd recommend choosing right away what kind of third person you want to write. If you're moving from first person, then a close third person (limited third person) would be an easier switch. You basically glue yourself to one character's POV, as if you're sitting on their shoulder and narrating their thoughts, but you're not them. Close third person is also really fun to write, you can zoom out and zoom in as the plot demands.
 

rileykifer

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Head hopping is not wrong. It can be done naturally in third-person omniscient. What you’re describing is third-person limited. Personally, I prefer limited, it’s closest to first person but with added flexibility.

True, but I assumed OP was going for third person limited, since that's more common and much easier. I once read something years ago about how omniscient is hard to do right, and that it's a common mistake for people trying omniscient for the first time to accidentally write it as third person limited with head hopping instead.
 

Nolff

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I wouldn't give any tips about 3rd person POV, but I do like to say that this is my first time hearing 3rd person omniscient. Maybe I had read books or stories with it inside. If I did, then I certainly am stupid to think that limited 3rd person and omniscient 3rd person are the same.

To anyone giving tips to OP, I thank you all. I'm gonna put hours researching about this and delve into the world of omniscient story-telling. See ya.
 
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