ザムザ (samsa)
i struggled with the shading but whoo hoo it’s DONE after months of artblock :)
Three Goblin Art

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ザムザ (samsa)
i struggled with the shading but whoo hoo it’s DONE after months of artblock :)
I FIXED SAKI!!!
i only realised that after i had posted her i forgot the pink in her hair!
MORE ARE FINISHED!!!
airi momoi (requested by @eenhorneari) and saki tenma have been drawn and omg i had a lot of fun with trying to match their eye shapes.
REPOSTING SAKI BECAUSE I MESSED UP HER HAIR
AN SHIRAISHI IS NEXT
i loved drawing her, i think she turned out really well!! might start making a prediction chart for death orders :3
anotha one
KANADE YOISAKI MY BABY MY CHILD MY BLORBO
she is the ultimate composer!
hihi i've decided to draw every pjsk character in the danganronpa art style to maybe perhaps make a pjsk x dr au
this is the protagonist mafuyu asahina the ultimate lyricist
Prompts for [Quiet] Power
✧ She never raised her voice, yet the room adjusted itself around her.
✧ He only had to lift his eyes for the argument to end.
✧ The crown sat lightly on her head, yet every spine bent.
✧ His silence landed harder than any threat.
✧ She folded her hands and the court followed suit.
✧ He spoke softly and the guards moved faster.
✧ Her patience was not mercy, it was calculation.
✧ He let them finish talking, then changed the outcome anyway.
✧ She did not command the room, the room simply obeyed.
✧ His calm made panic look foolish.
✧ She smiled once and alliances shifted.
✧ He never interrupted, yet no one ever finished without his permission.
✧ Her stillness unsettled people who were used to chaos.
✧ He did not pursue control, it drifted toward him.
✧ She waited until they overplayed their hand.
✧ His power showed only when he chose restraint.
✧ She never chased influence, it followed quietly behind her.
✧ He ended conflicts with a pause instead of a weapon.
✧ Her gentleness carried an unspoken warning.
✧ He ruled without reminding anyone that he ruled.
Thought this might help others who struggle when writing. I know I get in my head too much.
Prompts for [Quiet] Power
✧ She never raised her voice, yet the room adjusted itself around her.
✧ He only had to lift his eyes for the argument to end.
✧ The crown sat lightly on her head, yet every spine bent.
✧ His silence landed harder than any threat.
✧ She folded her hands and the court followed suit.
✧ He spoke softly and the guards moved faster.
✧ Her patience was not mercy, it was calculation.
✧ He let them finish talking, then changed the outcome anyway.
✧ She did not command the room, the room simply obeyed.
✧ His calm made panic look foolish.
✧ She smiled once and alliances shifted.
✧ He never interrupted, yet no one ever finished without his permission.
✧ Her stillness unsettled people who were used to chaos.
✧ He did not pursue control, it drifted toward him.
✧ She waited until they overplayed their hand.
✧ His power showed only when he chose restraint.
✧ She never chased influence, it followed quietly behind her.
✧ He ended conflicts with a pause instead of a weapon.
✧ Her gentleness carried an unspoken warning.
✧ He ruled without reminding anyone that he ruled.
Writing tips: Let bodies do the talking
Body language is one of the most powerful tools you can use in your writing, especially when it comes to dialogue.
It reveals emotion without needing long explanations, and it gives your characters presence long before they speak.
Here are some physical cues you can use to bring your scenes to life:
Crossed arms / defensive stance → guarded, annoyed, uncertain
Fidgeting with sleeves / tapping fingers → nervous, impatient
Lingering touches / brushing hands → affection, tension, desire
Tightened jaw / clenched fists → anger, restraint, frustration
Averted eyes / looking at the floor → guilt, fear, embarrassment
Stepping back / leaning away → distrust or discomfort
Tilting head / raised eyebrows → curiosity, challenge
Shoulders relaxing / exhaling slowly → relief, vulnerability
When should you rely on body language?
When you want to show an emotion instead of naming it
When dialogue alone feels flat
When you need subtext (what they won’t say out loud)
When two characters feel differently than the words they’re speaking
When you want to make a scene more sensory and grounded
Are they really calm, or is their foot tapping like a warning signal? Are they truly angry, or is it just the way their jaw tightens when they’re hurt? Are they saying “I’m fine,” but refusing to meet anyone’s eyes?
Body language adds layers. It tells the truth when your characters won’t. It can add to the rage bubbling on their lips, letting the reader know when they're just about to blow up.
Use it intentionally, and your scenes will read less like conversations on a stage and more like real people breathing on the page.
Writing tips: He said, she said...
Readers don't tend to notice 'said', while it's there in the sentence, it doesn't give the sentence any life. It gets the job done, mostly...
Here are some options to try!
whispered / muttered / mumbled → soft or secretive
shouted / yelled / barked → anger, urgency
growled / hissed → danger, teasing, frustration
murmured / breathed → intimacy, vulnerability
snapped / barked / snapped back → irritation, defensiveness
laughed / chuckled / giggled → laughing, fun, playful or flirty
asked / questioned / queried / inquired → curiosity, questioning
demanded / insisted → authority or control
sighed / groaned → fatigue, exasperation, longing
When you're looking to replace said, think about why. You'll generally want to do this when you need the following:
when the tone of the line needs more context.
when you want to show emotion instead of telling it.
when your character’s body language, action, or expression can do the talking instead.
Take a look at the scene you're writing, is the character saying their line? Or are they yelling it? Screaming it? Are they enraged, or perhaps is their voice a broken whisper from grief?
That being said, you shouldn't always avoid using 'said.' It's easy to read in long sentences, and it keeps the focus on the dialogue rather than the rest of the scenes. That may be beneficial and a key component to parts of your story.
When Your Character Walks Into a Room…
There’s this funny misconception that when a character walks into a room, the important part is the room. Writers start scrambling to describe the walls, the wallpaper, the lighting, the color of the rug that no one asked for. And sure, you can do that. But the room doesn’t matter until your character touches it with their thoughts.
And I’m saying this with love, because I’ve written those “character enters room, now here’s a paragraph about the furniture” scenes too. We all have. They’re basically a rite of passage.
But the more you write (and the more drafts you survive) the more you realize something important: the room is NEVER the point. The PERSON entering it is.
When someone walks into a room in real life, they don’t float in like a neutral non-entity. They bring whatever emotional chaos they’ve been dealing with. They bring the argument they just had in the hallway. They bring the secret they’re not ready to tell anyone. They bring the memory the smell of the room just stabbed them with. People don’t arrive clean. They arrive mid-story, even if they pretend they’re fine. So instead of focusing on the chair in the corner, try starting with the emotional “temperature” your character walks in with.
Are they anxious and trying to hide it?
Are they exhausted and hoping nobody notices?
Are they excited but scared they’ll ruin everything the moment they open their mouth?
You don’t have to spell it out like a weather report, just let it tint the way they see the space. Plus, a room changes depending on who’s looking at it. If your character is confident, the space might feel open, manageable, almost welcoming. If they’re overwhelmed, the same room can feel too loud, too bright, too filled with people who suddenly seem to know exactly where they’re going and what they’re doing. If they’re guilty, every shadow becomes suspicious. If they’re sad, the room might seem bigger than it really is.
It doesn’t matter how the room “objectively” looks. What matters is what they see first.
And please let your characters enter rooms in realistically messy ways. Not every entrance needs to be cinematic or in the Hollywood style. Not every character glides. Some fumble the door handle. Some hesitate in the doorway because they suddenly can’t remember why they came in. Some scan the room too fast because they’re nervous and then pretend they weren’t scanning the room at all. Some try way too hard to appear casual and end up bumping into a table they didn’t even notice was there.
That kind of stuff makes your characters feel like a real person and not because the action is interesting, but because it’s familiar. It’s that tiny, “oh god, same” moment between the reader and the character, even if they never consciously notice it.
So REMEMBER: an entrance is a doorway for change, not just a physical movement. You’re not writing, “They walked into the room.” You’re writing, “They stepped into a moment.” And that’s a gamechanger.
Prompts for Writing Romantic Tension
✧ Standing close enough that their breaths mix, but not close enough to justify it.
✧ A hand hovering near their waist, as if unsure whether to stay respectful or ruin everything.
✧ The way their names sound when whispered at the wrong moment.
✧ Shoulders brushing in a hallway too wide for accidents.
✧ Laughing too softly and privately, like the joke was meant only for the space between them.
✧ The moment they both reach for the same object and freeze, fingers trapped in indecision.
✧ A silence that feels thick enough to lean against.
✧ The smile that appears when one of them isn’t looking.
✧ A heartbeat quickening when their hands accidentally link and neither pulls away.
✧ Eyes lingering a second too long, apologizing and confessing all at once.
Synonyms for "Walk"
How to write liars
Liars make stories twist, characters clash, and readers question everything. But not all liars are created equal. If you're writing one, ask yourself: what kind of liar are they? Because there’s more than one way to deceive…
Many types of liars
the one where you know they are lying
the one where you never know that they are lying
the one who lies about everything
the one who lies to themself
Writing Tips:
Know why they lie
Every liar has a reason. Is it survival, manipulation, shame, love, power, or habit? Understanding their motive helps you shape their behavior and emotional responses.
Use subtext and contradictions
Liars rarely say "I'm lying." Instead, they contradict themselves, dodge questions, or over-explain. Let their words and actions subtly clash.
Let the lie shape the plot
A good lie should ripple through the story. It creates misunderstandings, false alliances, and dramatic irony. Use it to mislead characters and readers.
Use silence
Sometimes the most powerful lie is omission. What a character doesn’t say can be just as revealing as what they do.
Play with perspective
Use unreliable narrators or shifting POVs to blur the line between truth and fiction. This keeps readers guessing and deepens the mystery.
Show consequences
How are characters reacting to someone lying to them? What happens if people find out a character lied?
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Quick tips for writing Sleep Deprivation
☽ Memory becomes absolute garbage. Like “why am I in the kitchen?” garbage. “What was I saying?” garbage. Their brain is running on buffering screens and regret.
☽ Fine motor skills? Ha. They’re dropping everything. Pens. Phones. Entire moral compass. They’re basically a malfunctioning claw machine.
☽ Hallucinations creep in. That jacket on the chair? Suddenly a person. That noise? Definitely doom. Everything becomes mildly haunted.
☽ Time gets weird. Five minutes feel like a year. A full hour disappears and they swear they blinked wrong.
☽ Irritation skyrockets. They get mad at chairs. At air. At gravity. At the audacity of other humans continuing to exist.
☽ Their voice sounds weird. Slow, scratchy, like they swallowed sand.
☽ They walk like a drunk baby giraffe. Walls suddenly jump closer. Floors rise unexpectedly. Coordination said: “I’m out.”
☽ Zoning out becomes a hobby. They stare at random objects like they’re trying to understand quantum mechanics.
☽ Vision blurs in and out. Like someone smeared Vaseline over their eyeballs out of spite.
☽ Their body just hurts. Not a dramatic pain, just the “why does my skeleton feel like it’s buzzing?” pain.
☽ Food cravings go feral. They’d fight someone for a stale cookie.
☽ Terrible choices. They will absolutely say “I’m fine” while making decisions that end in disaster.
☽ Random emotional implosions. Crying because their sock feels wrong? Yes.
☽ Cold hands. Cold feet. Cold heart. (Okay maybe not the last one, but it feels like it.)