ThisAdamGuy
Proud inventor of the chocolate onion
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2024
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I'm pretty sure everyone here has at least heard the criticism that a story is just "author wish fulfillment." And while this can be a legitimate criticism, you also can't deny that there's an element of wish fulfillment in every story ever written. The hero beats the villain, falls in love with their soulmate, and lives happily ever after. A story with no wish fulfillment at all wouldn't be satisfying to read. Even stories that go out of their way to buck conventional storytelling cliches like A Song of Ice and Fire feature some degree of wish fulfillment, because otherwise you wouldn't be so invested in watching the characters struggle to get what they want. So where do you think the line is drawn when wish fulfillment goes too far and becomes detrimental to the story?
Personally, I think it's when it becomes clear the author is going out of their way to make their characters play out their personal fantasies to the point that it stops being plausible even by fantasy standards. Like, tell me that a lonely nerd gets sent to a magical world where he gets superpowers, kills the bad guy, and everyone loves him, and I'd be able to buy that without too much trouble. But if you told me the lonely nerd got sent to a world populated only by beautiful women who haven't invented clothes, he's transformed into a seven foot tall adonis with a massive, perpetually rock-hard [SET OF ABS], the women are divided into tribes that each personify one of the author's fetishes, his divine mission is to repopulate the planet, and also he can turn into a pegasus, my suspension of disbelief would probably collapse like the Golden Gate Bridge in an action movie.
What about you?
Personally, I think it's when it becomes clear the author is going out of their way to make their characters play out their personal fantasies to the point that it stops being plausible even by fantasy standards. Like, tell me that a lonely nerd gets sent to a magical world where he gets superpowers, kills the bad guy, and everyone loves him, and I'd be able to buy that without too much trouble. But if you told me the lonely nerd got sent to a world populated only by beautiful women who haven't invented clothes, he's transformed into a seven foot tall adonis with a massive, perpetually rock-hard [SET OF ABS], the women are divided into tribes that each personify one of the author's fetishes, his divine mission is to repopulate the planet, and also he can turn into a pegasus, my suspension of disbelief would probably collapse like the Golden Gate Bridge in an action movie.
What about you?