What comes first: Character or Plot

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  • Character

    Votes: 16 43.2%
  • Plot

    Votes: 21 56.8%

  • Total voters
    37

LazyScript

Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2025
Messages
30
Points
18
Neither. I usually come up with an idea for a cool world for a story to take place in first. Then I'll think of some characters to live in that world, and then a story for them to be part of.
Generally I always think of the setting first, then characters and plot both at once.
Woah, setting? I did not think about that.

That's cool.

In the end, all stories start with a single idea, after all. Whether it be plot, character, or setting, it might not really matter.

Plot, but my characters, especially the main character tends to suffer for it which is a huge problem. I want to write the story a specific way because the plot demands it, but that also means I can't write with the spunky MC voice that everyone seems to love.
I get that.

There are times I want a plot line so badly that I force my characters to fit the mold. It's tough to find balance to both.

Alternatively, because of the emphasis on plot, I worry that I'm not building my character enough for the reader to actually empathize or understand them. Like, I obviously get them because they're my creations, but it's not easy knowing if the main character is properly fleshed out without that outside perspective.
 
Last edited:

TinaMigarlo

the jury is back. I'm almost too hot for smuthub.
Joined
Jan 9, 2026
Messages
511
Points
93
character and plot are weird. its great to have that big complex awesome plot, but then it makes it harder to execute. Its easy for the great plot to be bigger than your character, if that makes any sense. I was amazed the first time I wasn't even making a new book. I was just doing a writing exercise, so I grabbed a box standard plot to play with the exercise. Next thing I knew, I liked it and the thing started writing itself. Became one of my works I liked best. So a tired basic plot but with characters I already knew well... characters and everything else worked wonders. A character without the dialogue, or dialogue without the character... that's a no go in my estimation. I suppose characters are technically more important, because slice of life is a "thing" now. That's zero plot, all character and dialogue. Maybe the question should be character or dialogue. But then the answer is "both".
 
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