BetterNickPending
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- Joined
- Mar 21, 2024
- Messages
- 185
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- 43
Hi I have a question for experienced writers.
In what form do you create character sheets for characters in your story?
Do you have different forms for different importance of characters?
MC has the most complicated and most detailed form while one time characters have the most simple?
I need a way to track information about my MC and other characters.
I do not mean it in a LitRPG way.
This character sheet is meant for me (writer) not for readers.
Name, age, sex, appearance, those are obvious and can be managed my simple bullet point list.
But there is so much more to MC of any other character, than this.
If your MC has any super powers as a writer there should be a way to write them down. But write them down from backed point of view so that I as an author am consistent about how they work. Readers mostly get only descriptions of effects of those.
And now the most difficult things:
1. Backstory of MC or character. The part that made him what he is. The source of character perks and flaws. The source of motivations. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
2. Time line of events both before story and during the story. So that I do not have to re read whole story again and again to find a specific event. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
3. Relationships with other characters. That portion has potential to be most voluminous and is most important. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
4. How to make changes in all above as character experiences new things. Meets new people (or other creatures). Learns new things. Looses and gains equipment. Their powers evolve. Appearance gradually changes due to passage of time or battle scars. Copy pasting the whole character sheet of every character, after each chapter or in story day, just to do few minor changes so that I can compare with previous versions of character sheet defies purpose of all of that.
I made few attempts on creating structure to store all that information but I'm not happy with my results.
I feel like the guy in conspiracy board meme.
Then I thought that someone before me might already solved this problem.
I'm not asking about what to write. I am capable of inventing my own characters.
I'm asking how to write it. In what form to write it. How to structure it in consistent and accessible way. Do you use tables? Or point lists? Or something other? Do you borrow a character sheet from one of ttRPGs? Do yo do it in notebook or in text editor or maybe use an online tool for that? What information must be written down and for which it is sufficient to just have annotation "first half of chapter 34".
And please do not tell me that I can just remember all that.
Firstly if that was a solution (for me) I would not start a thread.
Secondly by having all of this written down, I can read it back and see potential plot holes, flaws or imperfections in my design, without having to re read the whole story (again).
Please share your experience in the matter and ways you solve this problem.
In what form do you create character sheets for characters in your story?
Do you have different forms for different importance of characters?
MC has the most complicated and most detailed form while one time characters have the most simple?
I need a way to track information about my MC and other characters.
I do not mean it in a LitRPG way.
This character sheet is meant for me (writer) not for readers.
Name, age, sex, appearance, those are obvious and can be managed my simple bullet point list.
But there is so much more to MC of any other character, than this.
If your MC has any super powers as a writer there should be a way to write them down. But write them down from backed point of view so that I as an author am consistent about how they work. Readers mostly get only descriptions of effects of those.
And now the most difficult things:
1. Backstory of MC or character. The part that made him what he is. The source of character perks and flaws. The source of motivations. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
2. Time line of events both before story and during the story. So that I do not have to re read whole story again and again to find a specific event. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
3. Relationships with other characters. That portion has potential to be most voluminous and is most important. How to write it down so it is not a wall of text, but a structured trove of information.
4. How to make changes in all above as character experiences new things. Meets new people (or other creatures). Learns new things. Looses and gains equipment. Their powers evolve. Appearance gradually changes due to passage of time or battle scars. Copy pasting the whole character sheet of every character, after each chapter or in story day, just to do few minor changes so that I can compare with previous versions of character sheet defies purpose of all of that.
I made few attempts on creating structure to store all that information but I'm not happy with my results.
I feel like the guy in conspiracy board meme.
Then I thought that someone before me might already solved this problem.
I'm not asking about what to write. I am capable of inventing my own characters.
I'm asking how to write it. In what form to write it. How to structure it in consistent and accessible way. Do you use tables? Or point lists? Or something other? Do you borrow a character sheet from one of ttRPGs? Do yo do it in notebook or in text editor or maybe use an online tool for that? What information must be written down and for which it is sufficient to just have annotation "first half of chapter 34".
And please do not tell me that I can just remember all that.
Firstly if that was a solution (for me) I would not start a thread.
Secondly by having all of this written down, I can read it back and see potential plot holes, flaws or imperfections in my design, without having to re read the whole story (again).
Please share your experience in the matter and ways you solve this problem.