Kilolo
I'm so kewl
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2019
- Messages
- 419
- Points
- 103
you know what the part that exasperate me?
that people actually assuming that shows means wrote the whole thing as a wall of text and tell means writing it in a direct sentence.
the former isn't called show, it's a thorough describing, and the later isn't called tell either, it's just a brief sentence
what it means by show not tell, is deliberately giving a gaping, yet obvious information about something.
the most common example I often read: in a novel with system/game elements with stat point and such. lots of author put the exact number of how many points the MC allocate to their stats. and then giving out an exact number without telling the reader how strong is 23 point in STR is.
meanwhile some of higher rated LN out there with system/game elements. they rarely specify how much point the mc allocate to each stat. (except maybe some korean WN). most of them just wrote something like "I used to be able to split a rock with a size of a dog house, but after I allocate some of the point to the strength, I can now split a boulder with a size of a carriage."
they didn't tell the reader how many points that MC allocate to the strength, or how many point mc str is currently at. but we can tell that he's becoming stronger now.
it's not about the length or the amount of information, it's about what you wrote to describe things.
that people actually assuming that shows means wrote the whole thing as a wall of text and tell means writing it in a direct sentence.
the former isn't called show, it's a thorough describing, and the later isn't called tell either, it's just a brief sentence
what it means by show not tell, is deliberately giving a gaping, yet obvious information about something.
the most common example I often read: in a novel with system/game elements with stat point and such. lots of author put the exact number of how many points the MC allocate to their stats. and then giving out an exact number without telling the reader how strong is 23 point in STR is.
meanwhile some of higher rated LN out there with system/game elements. they rarely specify how much point the mc allocate to each stat. (except maybe some korean WN). most of them just wrote something like "I used to be able to split a rock with a size of a dog house, but after I allocate some of the point to the strength, I can now split a boulder with a size of a carriage."
they didn't tell the reader how many points that MC allocate to the strength, or how many point mc str is currently at. but we can tell that he's becoming stronger now.
it's not about the length or the amount of information, it's about what you wrote to describe things.