What is your story ACTUALLY about

MC-Stories

The Wandering Dragon Storyteller
Joined
Dec 2, 2025
Messages
119
Points
43
I know that every story has a premise, but I’m not asking about that.

I’m asking what is the main theme of your story? What ideas are you trying to explore and convey through your writing?

For my novel, I’m trying to explore different types of love, like familial love, platonic, and romantic, and how that love can sometimes be unhealthy.

What about your story?

My Beast Hero saga is about innocence in a world divided by fear and abuse of power
 

Lorelliad

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2025
Messages
11
Points
48
The main themes are self-discovery and its subsequent self-actualization, meant to mirror how the author is kinda lost right now and would rather write an eighteen year old's journey through a world than find ways to better himself.
 

Yubel

Active member
Joined
Jan 14, 2020
Messages
15
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43
TTo find the answer to these two questions: How much interference in another person's life is considered acceptable? And does a greater good require self-sacrifice?
 

mythosandmagic

Active member
Joined
Aug 13, 2025
Messages
127
Points
43
I know that every story has a premise, but I’m not asking about that.

I’m asking what is the main theme of your story? What ideas are you trying to explore and convey through your writing?

For my novel, I’m trying to explore different types of love, like familial love, platonic, and romantic, and how that love can sometimes be unhealthy.

What about your story?
At its core, my story is about stewardship instead of domination.


It explores the idea that power, whether divine, political, or personal, is not something meant to be imposed on others, but something meant to be used with restraint, humility, and care. The gods in this world don’t exist to rule through fear or force. They exist to tend, to guide, and sometimes to step back and let others grow on their own.


Another major theme is mentorship across time. The relationship at the heart of the story isn’t a conquest, a prophecy, or a romance; it’s the slow, patient passing of wisdom. I’m interested in how trust is built, how curiosity is protected, and how guidance can shape a future without controlling it.


The story also wrestles with free will versus destiny. Even in a universe where gods exist and timelines can be seen, choice still matters. Growth only has meaning if it’s chosen, not engineered.


Finally, it’s a story about tenderness in a vast universe. Most epic fantasy leans on violence, escalation, and domination. I wanted to explore what an epic looks like when its most powerful moments are quiet ones: listening, waiting, protecting innocence, and choosing not to act when force would be easier.


If there’s one idea tying it all together, it’s this:
True power is proven not by how much you can control—but by how much you’re willing to trust.
 

Representing_Tromba

Sleep deprived mess of an author begging for feedb
Joined
Jan 29, 2020
Messages
5,966
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233
I take characters through multiple times periods whenever I feel like exploring a place/culture through the lense of crass asshole who stepped into time travel accidentally and would rather try to kill an immortal wizard demigod that hates his guts than use his powers for something worthwhile because his drunk best friend and a feminist witch/doctor keep hyping him up.

Also, how to deal with trauma in a healthy manner.
 

SockySake

New member
Joined
Dec 7, 2025
Messages
2
Points
3
The Core of CHAINS is exactly that. The things that bind us. Some are good, some are bad. Some are within our control, while most others are out of our hands. Sometimes the thing binding you is something good, and you just don't know it until you lose it. I want to explore many different ideas of 'chains', the things that bind us, and how to break the ones that harm you.

I may not be able to live up to this grand ideal, but I hope you join me on the journey.

Also, I found this prompt very helpful. Thank you.

 

HarryGarland

Active member
Joined
Aug 13, 2025
Messages
56
Points
33
Rebuilding from ashes and filling in a void left by another as a replacement.
Also, it's not about how something began, but what it grows into.
 

Anonjohn20

Pen holding member
Joined
Mar 22, 2023
Messages
1,731
Points
153
All of my unposted stories dealt with internal conflicts. One character had to choose between hedonism and love, another struggled to make meaningful connections due to his narcissism, another explores nihilism, one was trying to learn to trust despite his abandonment issues, etc.
 

rileykifer

Member
Joined
Dec 13, 2025
Messages
55
Points
18
The future is always changing, but people and their problems stay the same.
 

Ral_062

Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2025
Messages
43
Points
18
For my story it involves many things such as betrayal, regret, consequences and much more. But if there was a main theme for my story it would be "Humanity often destroys what they don't understand"

I have so much planned content for my story... It so confusing sometimes
 

Nevafrost

A stupid and foolish daughter
Joined
Apr 5, 2024
Messages
798
Points
108
About four dumbass princesses who are stupid enough to leave their comfort zone just because they are bored. Too much curiosity leads to trouble.
 

Genesis_King

Active member
Joined
Dec 16, 2021
Messages
12
Points
43
Writing two novels but I will tell about one. A god dies and the members of his church are hunted down and killed. The remaining survivors come back years later for revenge. A thoroughly brutal revenge where they just view their lives as chesspieces to kill more enemies. And that will be the only theme till the end. But since I am not good at writing long fights each fight takes 1 chapter only ?
 

Potato_waffles

New member
Joined
Feb 6, 2026
Messages
1
Points
3
I know that every story has a premise, but I’m not asking about that.

I’m asking what is the main theme of your story? What ideas are you trying to explore and convey through your writing?

For my novel, I’m trying to explore different types of love, like familial love, platonic, and romantic, and how that love can sometimes be unhealthy.

What about your story?
We will lose a lot. Sometimes we lose the people we love. We may not know who we are, or we might feel lost and scattered. We may see ourselves as small in the vastness of life. We may despair, grieve, and struggle to distinguish right from wrong.
But this is all part of the human experience. In the end, we continue living—not because we are particularly strong or heroic, but simply because we want to live.
 
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