I need an outsider's perspective about my writing.

Rookieqw

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 15, 2021
Messages
239
Points
103
Good time of day to you all, and sorry to bother you with my selfish request. I need an honest opinion about my current writing. I am aware that my story is a failure, but I am curious to know if my writing has improved in any way, as I myself am somewhat concerned that I have deteriorated as a typist. If this is not too much to ask, please take a look at my first chapter:

https://www.scribblehub.com/read/1042505-hordedoom/chapter/1042515/

and at one of my latest

https://www.scribblehub.com/read/1042505-hordedoom/chapter/1307409/

and tell if I have gotten better or worse over time (no need to sugarcoat it; the story sucks. You know it, I know it, and we have the objective proof in the form of comments and readers. My goal is to finish this novel and learn all I can from the process, so an honest critique would help a lot).
 

Tempokai

The Overworked One
Joined
Nov 16, 2021
Messages
1,396
Points
153
I read the prologue part 1&2, and chapter 98. You have a good writing skill, but that skill is your detriment in the medium you're writing. It reads more like French philosophers compared to a typical webnovel. It’s trying to straddle the line between being a gritty dystopian epic and a snappy webnovel, and failing spectacularly at both. The result? A bloated, overwritten piece that seems to think readers have nothing better to do than sift through its mountains of existential dread and those 10 hour long YouTube "documentary" videos.

You, yes, you love your prose. Every sentence feels like it’s auditioning for a Pulitzer, complete with overwrought metaphors, dense descriptions, and enough philosophical waxing to make a French existentialist blush. Instead of delivering tight, impactful writing, I'm dragged through scenes that overstay their welcome, dialogue that sounds like it’s written for a stage play, and internal monologues that are so repetitive they start circling back on themselves. For example:
“Meat hooks pierced the skin between her ribs and her exoskeleton, threatening to scrape against her lungs if she tried to escape.”
This is fine until you realize we’ve already spent paragraphs hearing about Janine’s injuries in excruciating detail. It slows down the pacing. Simple tell would've worked better. You mastered the "show, don't tell" part, and now you have a new mountain to climb, called "SHOW and TELL". Webnovel readers want clarity and momentum, not dense prose that makes them wonder if they accidentally picked up a dystopian poetry collection.

Dialogue is overly dramatic. Sure, it can work, but when NO ONE is talking like real human in those three chapters I looked, it loses the edge. The sheer verbosity makes the webnovel sound like you are trying too hard. Also, in the prologue there's unnecessary profanity. I could've understood if there's was a culture that has those "bad" words (fuck, bitch, so on) in the lab, but because it MUST be sterile, lifeless environment with test subject around, it doesn't feel like fantasy and instead NYC for some reason. NYC is experiment too, but whatever.

The biggest flaw is pacing. I already written because of "show, don't tell", your writing is slow, glacial even. You don't need to detail what you don't need to detail, you don't need to show every thought of the MC if it's suggested by actions. SUBTEXT EXISTS FOR A REASON. Cut the bloat. Focus on what’s happening now. Readers don’t need a 2,000-word meditation on suffering, as nobody except unhinged reads Sartre.

The worldbuilding is ambitious, I’ll give it that. Secret labs, dystopian armies, philosophical wolfkin tribes, and pseudo-religious zealots, it’s all very big. But the problem isn’t the world itself, it’s how you, the writer, delivers it. I'm hit with a barrage of unexplained terms (whitecoats, orange fiends, vivisectoriums, Dynast, Blessed Mother, etc.) without context or pacing. It’s like someone in the game dumping 1000 subquests at once, and saying “Figure it out.” Sure, I could do that, but because it's a WEBNOVEL, I rather go to work during sunday and print those 540 tablets rather than finding what the descriptions of those made by author are. Introduce the world gradually, through character interactions and plot-relevant moments. Let the reader discover the lore naturally, instead of shoving it down their throats like a PowerPoint presentation.

Another issue is that you've writing it like a novel for Kindle. You are clearly writing the next great dystopian epic, but you're posting it on a platform where readers want quick, bingeable stories with clear pacing and relatable characters. It’s like serving foie gras at a fast-food joint, you’re catering to the wrong crowd. Average SH reader wants quick, but not THAT quick pacing. If you want to write for ScribbleHub, streamline the story, simplify the prose, and focus on action and character-driven drama. If you want to write for Kindle, lean into the literary tone like you have right now, but be prepared to lose the casual webnovel crowd entirely.

This webnovel is like a three-course meal served on a paper plate. The ingredients are good, the ambition is there, but the presentation is all wrong. You are trying to do much. aiming for high-concept dystopian brilliance without understanding the expectations of the webnovel format. Simplify your prose. Tighten the pacing. Stop writing internal monologues every two paragraphs. Understand the difference between a Kindle Unlimited epic and a bingeable webnovel. Until then, this story will remain what it is: a frustratingly dense, overly ambitious mess that has no idea who it’s trying to impress. Do better, author. Your readers deserve it, and so do your ideas.
 

Rookieqw

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 15, 2021
Messages
239
Points
103
Dialogue is overly dramatic. Sure, it can work, but when NO ONE is talking like real human in those three chapters I looked, it loses the edge. The sheer verbosity makes the webnovel sound like you are trying too hard. Also, in the prologue there's unnecessary profanity. I could've understood if there's was a culture that has those "bad" words (fuck, bitch, so on) in the lab, but because it MUST be sterile, lifeless environment with test subject around, it doesn't feel like fantasy and instead NYC for some reason. NYC is experiment too, but whatever.
ideas.
Sorry about that. I tried to follow the advice I heard on YouTube about how each character should have their own individual voice and tried to write in a way that would be logical for them. But it seems I went way too far. If it is not too much to ask, can you please tell me if the dialogue between the kids in this chapter feels more natural? https://www.scribblehub.com/read/1042505-hordedoom/chapter/1154166/

I read the prologue part 1&2, and chapter 98. You have a good writing skill, but that skill is your detriment in the medium you're writing. It reads more like French philosophers compared to a typical webnovel. It’s trying to straddle the line between being a gritty dystopian epic and a snappy webnovel, and failing spectacularly at both. The result? A bloated, overwritten piece that seems to think readers have nothing better to do than sift through its mountains of existential dread and those 10 hour long YouTube "documentary" videos.

You, yes, you love your prose. Every sentence feels like it’s auditioning for a Pulitzer, complete with overwrought metaphors, dense descriptions, and enough philosophical waxing to make a French existentialist blush. Instead of delivering tight, impactful writing, I'm dragged through scenes that overstay their welcome, dialogue that sounds like it’s written for a stage play, and internal monologues that are so repetitive they start circling back on themselves. For example:
“Meat hooks pierced the skin between her ribs and her exoskeleton, threatening to scrape against her lungs if she tried to escape.”
This is fine until you realize we’ve already spent paragraphs hearing about Janine’s injuries in excruciating detail. It slows down the pacing. Simple tell would've worked better. You mastered the "show, don't tell" part, and now you have a new mountain to climb, called "SHOW and TELL". Webnovel readers want clarity and momentum, not dense prose that makes them wonder if they accidentally picked up a dystopian poetry collection.

I am so sorry that my work comes off as pretentious; I didn't mean to write it that way, honestly! I just tried to write a story I would be interested in reading, and I am not smart enough to even dare attempt to write an epic.

My story is overbloated. That makes sense, and it is a flaw I need to work on. If it is okay to ask, do you have any ideas on how I can learn how to trim this stuff? I read novels when I have time, and their pacing is better than mine; there is no denying that. But when I tried to imitate their writing, this was the result.

Thank you for your detailed critique!
 

Tempokai

The Overworked One
Joined
Nov 16, 2021
Messages
1,396
Points
153
If it is not too much to ask, can you please tell me if the dialogue between the kids in this chapter feels more natural? https://www.scribblehub.com/read/1042505-hordedoom/chapter/1154166/

I read the chapter. The kids feel like kids but not quite "kid" enough, though for noble children around 15 years old, they sound natural enough for the context. My main concerns are less about their voices and more about two recurring issues: bloated prose and dialogue tags.

Your descriptions are still verbose. While pacing has improved, you’re still describing for the sake of describing. Focus on what characters are doing, not just thinking or observing. One shortcut to experiment with is "action, description (if needed), reaction/dialogue." I do this most of the time. This will keep things flowing while giving you room to show the world. For instance, instead of spending three paragraphs describing the rain, condense it to one impactful sentence woven into the characters’ actions.

There is also an issue on dialogue tags: Keep them simple. Overusing creative tags like “he snapped dramatically” slows down dialogue flow. Most of the time, “said” or no tag at all works fine, let the dialogue carry the weight.

My advice for trimming your prose? Try writing like Hemingway as an experiment. He focused on short, simple sentences with "unsaid depth." His approach leaves room for readers to infer meaning, creating "power" through simplicity. Ask yourself for every sentence:
- Does this move the story forward?
- Does it reveal something new about the characters or world?
- If I cut this, will the story still make sense?

If the answer is "no," consider cutting or condensing it. Passion for your story is great, but too much of it leads to overload, like a story you have now. Channel that passion into purposeful, streamlined writing, or rather to editing.
 

Kalliel

Grind, Future, A Beautiful Star
Joined
Aug 8, 2023
Messages
516
Points
133
Whether a story is a 'failure' or not is subjective. Some already consider having a story to be a success. With that said, don't think so badly of your story.

Now, I think I have looked at your rat story once or twice before, and I can find the same issues that one has on this one as well. I won't say anything about worldbuilding, character building, or anything of the sort since those are more of a market matter, but I'll say this about your writing itself—it exhausts the reader.

For me, a novel is supposed to entertain me, and for that, I'd want something digestible—light and easy to follow. That's just how web novels need to be nowadays. Now, granted, there are stories leaning toward elaborate prosing like yours that do well, but you won't be able to find the kind of audience for them here.

Just nail it in your head whenever you're writing—keep it simple.
 

Rookieqw

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 15, 2021
Messages
239
Points
103
but I'll say this about your writing itself—it exhausts the reader.
There is much for me to learn then. Oh, well, I have found another way that does not work. I think reading Hemingway as I finish my current story will help me get a better perspective on how to start and write a new one.

Thank you for your help!
 
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