coalitiongirl (
coalitiongirl) wrote in
sq_roundrobin2015-04-26 11:33 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
Plot, Plot, Plot
So we now have our writers and you've looked through all the technical details, and now it's time to talk plot! We've got seven days to suggest and discuss any ideas you have in the comments, and here are two things to keep in mind:
Oh, and I don't think we'll do a totally alternate universe this time around because many people aren't used to writing out of the 'verse. Anything that takes place within the OUAT universe, even if it's a complete deviation from canon, is fair game.
- Each chapter should ideally be a story in itself. We're each getting one opportunity to write and so we want a plot that allows for each writer to play within the 'verse without being caught up in transitional chapters or the like!
- At the same time, we also want to have one coherent ongoing plot that allows for development so it doesn't read like a series of short stories.
- We could rewrite a season. We have exactly as many writers as there are episodes, and we could each tackle one. (I'm wary of this option simply because there's the OUATVS and because I don't know about the rest of you, but I find episode rewrites kind of dull, especially when we have many stronger writers than the OUAT ones?)
- We can settle on a theme with stronger individual chapter plots and a weaker overall plot. I suggested tropes before- it could be something like "some kind of magical trickster has come to town and keeps casting wacky spells," and then we go from there. (I've seen people do that way back when SQW did magical mishaps.) In that, the story would be very much about individual chapters and character/relationship development, but it's tricky because the latter sometimes gets lost in the process.
- We can settle on one standard plot that we like and write to it- this is generally easy and straightforward, though you do need a more intricately organized outline from the start so you don't run out of plot along the way.
Oh, and I don't think we'll do a totally alternate universe this time around because many people aren't used to writing out of the 'verse. Anything that takes place within the OUAT universe, even if it's a complete deviation from canon, is fair game.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I imagine we could take a similar approach to whatever we decide, too -- split up into groups, each handle a particular plot point or set of plot points, and decide within the smaller group how to divide the arc.
no subject
no subject
Maybe we should decide on if we're going to write in groups or not first, then we can decide on themes and lines of plot and possibly assign portions of plot or chosen trope or such to each group, like you said, and work like that.
Should we plan all 22 chapters (with each author having their say of course) is what I'm really asking, and then everyone kind of writes what they will with their own spin to their assignment?
Because leaving everyone to its own devices kinds of feels like we're going to have a big nightmare for continuity. And poor Turtle has volunteered to be a tribute.
Or I can totally shut up.
C.
no subject
One is with the strong plot, no groups. Person A writes, Person B follows up from there, and so on and so forth. We have a few guidelines (a loose outline so, say, people writing chapters 7-9 know they'll be building up/writing a villain reveal, but they do it on their own time) but overall it's more about picking up threads and continuing with your own style.
The second would be like this, with the tropes organized by group and and each group having a (probably mostly romantic) piece of the arc. It's a bit different because there are smaller teams and each one is completing their own little arc, so it demands more cooperation than just writing from someone else's end line would be.
no subject
Yes, the continuity and coherence should be a challenge, but we can overcome that if we organize the work properly.
So, if I have understood correctly, there are several things we should be deciding:
1. From which canon timeline point we would be addressing the story (personally, I am incline to pick a point in an indetermined future, after all current canon crisis is solved; but it could be any point after season 2 or 3, imo, too; maybe connecting with the other idea of writing about what could have happened post Neverland if new curse hadn't been casted?).
2. The general plot that would run throughout the whole fic. Should we have a new villain/mischief maker? What would be the main force driving our characters (especially, E&R) to action?
3. The 6 subplots that would be organized around certain tropes and to be more especifically worked by a smaller group of writers.
4. Tone: I think you suggested to keep it drama, and insert angst/fluff/humor at times. I like the idea, but I am still concerned with the tone/style unity, more that plot coherence.
Is that all?
no subject
no subject
In every parallel universe, she met Faith. In some, they were together; in others, she was married to Angel or Spike or even Riley, or Faith was with someone else; but in each reality, she had to resolve some issue in Alt-Buffy’s or Alt-Faith's life to make that version of Buffy and Faith happy in order to move on, i.e. the Quantum Leap effect.
The chapters therefore didn’t have to be linked at all, except by those two characters. So, people could include other characters/pairings they liked/missed/always wanted to see together into their version of the reality. They could establish realities in which canon business they hated had never happened. They could write a 1,500 word chapter of pure smut (Buffy wakes up next to Faith; teh sexy times happen; le fin) or 8,500 words of we’re-with-other-people-but-I-see-how-you-look-at-me angst. Xander could be reunited with Anya; Dawn never needed to happen; Joyce/Tara could still be alive. For complete AU fans, they could be themselves, but somewhere else entirely with no Sunnyvale or vampires or what-have-you.
The only through-line in all of them was that they were obviously Meant For Each Other.
no subject
The other thing is suggest is that we start this off with Emma and Regina being at odds (S1, S2, early S4 if we're doing Regina POV, or an invented time) just because it allows for more ongoing character development so it doesn't feel like 22 separate stories.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Part of where it gets complicated is that since there are so many of us we might have different allegiances--like, I love Emma, but at the end of the day I am here for Regina, so writing an Emma centric fic where Regina isn't doing much would be hard for me. And others are probably the opposite! Which is cool! But means that if we're only focusing on one of them, it might not be the one that at least some writers are attached to.
no subject
I think we'd have to see where people took it! I'd rather read this as Regina's journey because I feel like that'd be a more extreme shift in worldview for her (whereas Emma's would go from, "eh, terrible person" to "I LOVE HER SO MUCH" without as much conflict, lbr), but the plus side to having lots of writers is that some will focus on Emma automatically, some will focus on Regina automatically. And so the story itself becomes both of them. (We could also have the POV option any time for Emma, too, even as an observer to another world.)
no subject
(Anonymous) 2015-05-02 12:37 am (UTC)(link)L.
no subject