this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
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Worldbuilding
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It will be a written story, most likely a web series of chaptered novels/novellas on somewhere like Wattpad. I envision it to have a coherent overarching story for the whole thing, but split into episodic arcs like a TV show or book series (think Redwall or Warrior Cats). I already have a plot outline for the big picture of what I want to happen and things to progress. If I can manage to get people to donate to me writing this on a Patreon or something that would be my dream, but it's too early for that.
I currently mostly do literary roleplays with it, basically a Dungeons and Dragons type roleplay but completely in text, and you're essentially taking turns writing a novel bit by bit. Haven't started the actual canonical story yet. TBH I'm a little afraid to because I feel that once I write the canonical stories, I'm kind of committed to the state of the world it's currently in, and I want to finalize the background details before I start, not sure if that's the right way of thinking about that though. Roleplays are fun and I usually also include suggestions and inserts from whoever I'm doing it with, just to not make it feel like I'm dictating what it should be in a collaborative work. I also just really like exploring this world with other people and seeing what they make of it! Which is also why I post here!
My pipe dream is for this to become a proper cartoon or anime series because it was very much inspired by cartoons with animals in them, and I definitely think it would work best in a visual medium where things can be shown instead of me worrying about explaining it while keeping the right pacing and avoiding info-dumping. But I can't draw so it would either have to be picked up by a studio (which would be difficult because this isn't intended for kids, more like a Futurama or Rick and Morty type show) or I'd need to make a ton of money from the written versions that I can use to commission my own animated series. Not really realistic but I can dream.
Committing to changes in the world can be stressful when you've worked so hard to get the details to a point where you like the state of things. I think it's less a writing challenge and more of an emotional challenge though, don't you? Our worlds aren't fragile, we're just attached to the way things are meant to be. It's normal to feel that way, and I'm sure some of your characters would, too. If something goes out of whack, how would they try to fix it?
The alternative is to commit to an episodic format of storytelling, which can be fun for shorter formats and just as rewarding. I think more TV media should try harder to resist serialization, as it tends to diminish the enjoyment of individual episodes and devalue the time you spend with the show (looking at you, modern Star Wars shows - no I do not want to sit there for two hours while you say "trust me, it gets good". It probably will, but my time has value!).
Lots of words to say, trust your gut. Some stories just feel right being episodic. If your setting has a firm baseline that everything returns to, you can work with that.