ThrillingHuman
always be casual, never be careless
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2019
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I was thinking about how to write very overpowered evil characters.
I think I got it.
A person doesn't just go evil, they don't just go eating babies or torturing people or even aiming for world dominance for no reason.
So, there must be some fundamental flaw in that evil character's personality, one that they cannot redeem permanently or refuse to do so, and instead they either satisfy their urges or ease their pain through or insist on their mistake, continuing to act evil. It's like a crack that keeps growing bigger and bigger the more it's not tended to properly.
Which is why, the longer a character goes evil, goes against logic or their own morality, theblonger they lie to themselves ornindulge their flaw, the bigger the flaw in their personality becomes, they need more energy, more time, more emotion to ease it, and it becomes harder to fix.
So that's why the overpowered calculating all-around amazing evil antagonist (or protagonist/side character) at first can be wise, amazing and unbeatable. But later? Later their flaw grows and they become less wise, less amazing, more beatable.
And it also allows for some good drama - as a protagonist they make for a person so close to redemption keeps refusing the opportunity, and it keeps snowballing. It's dramatic and tragic frustruating and, ultimately, entertaining. As an antagonist? It makes all the more tragic that their victims are really required to be sacrificed. It's almost a sacrifice to some dark malevolent force that is traded for a chance to take down the originally unbeatable monster. If handled nicely, it can make for some good drama and tragedy. Also one can compare the protagonist and the villain if they mirror each other. One can overcome their flaw, the other indulges.
I think I got it.
A person doesn't just go evil, they don't just go eating babies or torturing people or even aiming for world dominance for no reason.
So, there must be some fundamental flaw in that evil character's personality, one that they cannot redeem permanently or refuse to do so, and instead they either satisfy their urges or ease their pain through or insist on their mistake, continuing to act evil. It's like a crack that keeps growing bigger and bigger the more it's not tended to properly.
Which is why, the longer a character goes evil, goes against logic or their own morality, theblonger they lie to themselves ornindulge their flaw, the bigger the flaw in their personality becomes, they need more energy, more time, more emotion to ease it, and it becomes harder to fix.
So that's why the overpowered calculating all-around amazing evil antagonist (or protagonist/side character) at first can be wise, amazing and unbeatable. But later? Later their flaw grows and they become less wise, less amazing, more beatable.
And it also allows for some good drama - as a protagonist they make for a person so close to redemption keeps refusing the opportunity, and it keeps snowballing. It's dramatic and tragic frustruating and, ultimately, entertaining. As an antagonist? It makes all the more tragic that their victims are really required to be sacrificed. It's almost a sacrifice to some dark malevolent force that is traded for a chance to take down the originally unbeatable monster. If handled nicely, it can make for some good drama and tragedy. Also one can compare the protagonist and the villain if they mirror each other. One can overcome their flaw, the other indulges.