PBJ_Time
It's Peanut Butter Jelly Time!
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- Jun 7, 2023
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This has been on my mind lately, but I'm quite conflicted on whether I should. The main premise of my story is "Prideful MMA fan gets reincarnated into an open world filled with billions of monsters at every corner." Think Vampire Survivors or HoloCure, only the protagonist is a blood-crazed maniac perfect for the job. He always dies in a gas explosion at his apartment, too.
Since I want a prologue within his perspective, I have my own ideas:
1. The prologue starts with the protagonist doing his daily routine of keeping his 150th win streak at his local MMA club. He takes his trophy back to his apartment but then dies in a gas explosion.
2. The prologue starts with the protagonist getting ready for school, hangs out with his friends, and beats a few delinquents making trouble. He dies the same way.
3. The prologue starts with the protagonist visiting the Hachiko statue in downtown Shibuya, then gets invited into a wedding of his two best friends. But alas, as he dresses for the occasion back at his apartment, the inevitable happens. You get the idea.
If those last two sound a bit too personal with his previous life, that's because I got them from an unused draft. But I would love to hear anyone else's suggestions, especially from fellow authors who have written prologues of their own. Thank you.
Since I want a prologue within his perspective, I have my own ideas:
1. The prologue starts with the protagonist doing his daily routine of keeping his 150th win streak at his local MMA club. He takes his trophy back to his apartment but then dies in a gas explosion.
2. The prologue starts with the protagonist getting ready for school, hangs out with his friends, and beats a few delinquents making trouble. He dies the same way.
3. The prologue starts with the protagonist visiting the Hachiko statue in downtown Shibuya, then gets invited into a wedding of his two best friends. But alas, as he dresses for the occasion back at his apartment, the inevitable happens. You get the idea.
If those last two sound a bit too personal with his previous life, that's because I got them from an unused draft. But I would love to hear anyone else's suggestions, especially from fellow authors who have written prologues of their own. Thank you.
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