the urge to write Tobirama and make everything about him is so real and funny because I stop myself with “no we have child soldiers at home” as I continue writing the HoO fic
RMH
Fai_Ryy
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

oozey mess
Sweet Seals For You, Always
noise dept.
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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Cosmic Funnies

Love Begins
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

if i look back, i am lost

⁂

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Stranger Things
h
Peter Solarz
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Xuebing Du
seen from Armenia
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@nicheknowledge
the urge to write Tobirama and make everything about him is so real and funny because I stop myself with “no we have child soldiers at home” as I continue writing the HoO fic
nico robin and senju tobirama would have such an interesting vibeee
Writing existing character voices for fanfic
Hey, so, I started doing a writeup a week ago about how to get character voices in your fanfic to sound “in character,” in response to a comment from a new writer I was beta-ing for.
I’ve been told this is a thing I do well.
As someone who studied dialogue extensively for a theatre degree, I tend to do this reflexively now, and I don’t write out each individual step. But I put some thought into how I might break down the process if I was new at it and looking to get better.
I don’t think it’s actually that different than an actor studying character accents, except as a writer you’re breaking down meaning rather than sound.
Let’s take a look at what makes dialogue unique to a character. I’m gonna list these as bullet points first, and then I’ll suggest some exercises to explore these aspects of speech.
Most important aspects - focus on these first
Vocabulary - the words they use. As subset of this:
Complexity of words, which can include:
Syllable length
Likelihood to be used in casual conversation - a character can be very smart and still use very informal language.
Cultural touchpoints
Culture can include pop culture references - think Tony Stark’s nicknames for everyone, i.e. “Point Break” and “Underoos”
How in or out of sync the character is with the story’s setting with regard to both time and place - are they from a different country or era of time than their peers?
Important - Check these out if you have time
How likely the character is to speak their mind vs. change the subject - this could be for any number of reasons, from fear to duplicity
Amount they say / Introvertedness / how reticent they are - This is somewhat related to the above point, but not necessarily, and should be researched from different angles. Subverting a topic is not the same thing as being afraid to talk about it.
Different ways of speaking with different characters - this could be a function of story (i.e. how a character who is captured speaks to their captors as opposed to friends) as well as pure Code Switching
Deep cuts - Advanced aspects of speech
Fluency in the language they are speaking
Accents - You do not have to write a character in an accent, i.e. spell the words differently to show the accent, if you don’t want to. It really depends on the piece (usually how light hearted or humorous you want it to be) whether you do or not.
Okay, this is all well and good, you say. But HOW do I incorporate this into my writing?
Dialogue analysis exercise
Find five (or more, but at least five) representative lines from your character’s canon dialogue.
If they don’t speak, don’t have five lines, do the best you can. (I imagine other forms of communications can probably also be analyzed in this way, but I’m gonna focus on dialogue for now.)
These are going to be your key phrases. They need to be from canon and they need to be words that really show off who your character is.
Say the words out loud. Read them again and again. What do they sound / feel like?
What is the average syllable length? How many long words do they use?
Do any words jump out at you as archaic? What about modern pop culture references?
What is a different way they could have said this? Write some alternate versions of this phrase and figure out WHY the character didn’t say it this way instead. What is the difference between the canon dialogue and the alternative? Try to be as specific as possible. It’s as important to know what they wouldn’t say as what they would.
Look up any of the more complex words and find some similar ones, with a similar level of complexity. Use a thesaurus you trust and possibly also Wordnik. If your character doesn’t use ANY complex words, reflect on that. Why? What’s their reason? How does that fit with the rest of their personality?
Think of some other characters from other pop culture pieces who speak in a similar way. It doesn’t have to be 100% the same, but if it can help your ear get used to some new-but-different phrases, it’s enough. You’re training your brain to speak like the character. Start to sort phrases they would say from ones they wouldn’t. How do these two characters differ?
Now that you have worked thoroughly through your key phrases, start to imagine these lines said in something other than the original context. What if they were said to a different character? WOULD they even be said? What would change? What would happen if your character was scared / hurt / overjoyed / sick?
Finally, after all that, write some NEW dialogue for your character, either as practice, or right into your fic draft. Keep using your key phrases as a guide and go back to canon as much as you need to! You can do this!
After all of this, you should feel significantly more confident in writing that existing character into your story. Huzzah!
If you found this at all helpful, reblog and / or leave me a note. I’m curious to hear what you think.
Starting certain stories and fic with this is for fun like a spell and reminder that the main motivator is personal enjoyment and indulgence vs not saying it because there is a story that I need to exorcise and articulate
choosing to ignore my weirdly symbolic dream because i have a lot going on rn already
kiss this babey
i need to become a good writer quick because the jason and reyna friendship post TLH has me sick
HoO ruined Percy and Nico’s relationship, we knew this but dude sure it’s whatever that Percy claimed the prophecy so Nico wouldn’t have to die, forget that he hid his status as a son of hades so he wouldn’t be hunted down, who cares that he trekked the labyrinth for him. Who cares that Nico sought a way to make Percy as close to indestructible as he could. Who cares who cares who cares???
It appears there is no Ace week prompt list so I have made my own to follow! I might make a separate account to reblog if other people join in on this, but please feel free to use at your leisure! If you do join, so as not to get mixed up with the asexual week posts, please tag as ‘portgas d ace week 2026’!
all the true self indulgent fics live in my head, but they’re so powerful
hi! can you explain a little more about what you mean by writing warmups and puzzles? are they practice?
yes! they're practice!!! this started getting long so i'll put more info below a cut, but basically: exercises help with creativity, puzzles help with form, and i learned to do this by mimicking fan-artists.
imagery exercise - basically, describe a really vivid environment in extreme detail and try to evoke emotion and character ONLY with objects/scene. think "howl's room" or "howl's bathroom" from howl's moving castle. describe the objects/environment of a single still "image" or moment and try to paint a character picture from it. this is one of a few exercises i use to practice avoiding reliance on internal monologue or narration to portray emotion/character (which helps keep characters out of The Void in "real" stuff), because you can't use dialogue or internal narration. Scene only, baby!
sense exercise - try to focus entirely on one non-visual sense in a single moment in time for as long as you can (touch, taste, smell, sound); the imagery exercise covers the "visual" sense. basically, try to paint an emotional picture with something other than visuals or explicit emotions (e.g. no "this smell makes me sad", explain the smell itself, etc. etc.). the "touch" version of this exercise is great practice for bringing physicality into your writing, too, if you feel like your characters are talking but not interacting.
dialogue exercise - start a conversation in the middle and try to give context only through dialogue, no info-dumps allowed, making it as realistic as possible. the conversation itself doesn't matter so much as practicing natural speech patterns and conversation flow. think about how conversation flows when you are talking to someone IRL and try to mimic that instead of trying to write "story dialogue". (i probably do this exercise the most frequently because i find it the most entertaining; it's great for practicing comedy!)
metaphor puzzle - this one is for practicing emotional lyrical writing the same way the imagery exercise practices physical lyrical writing, this time with a focus on consistency. basically, take an abstract image and use it as the baseline for a much larger, longer metaphor and make word salad about it. the most important part about this is going back to the beginning after you've finished to make sure your metaphor stays consistent the entire time. if you start off talking about the body and randomly switch to an ocean metaphor halfway through, figure out how to turn the ocean back into the body.
line puzzle - like the metaphor puzzle, this one is about staying consistent/concise/impactful. basically, take a line that doesn't sound exactly the way you want it to (maybe it doesn't have the right punch? maybe its flow is off?) and pull it out. then rewrite the sentence in as many different ways as you can possibly think of. change words, change the order, condense or expand as needed. this helps practice "honing" your language.
voice exercise - simple and straightforward; pick a character POV you don't normally work with and try to write something entirely in their voice. this often involves a very short "research" portion where i go back and read dialogue, etc. from that character beforehand, but not always.
outsider exercise - also known as "voice exercise 2". write a scene, internal monologue, observation, etc. of your character(s) from an outsider's perspective. the outsider character itself doesn't matter at all and should basically just be a vessel for their observations, because the point of this is to help you work on external character traits/behavior. basically--no matter what your character is thinking or feeling internally (and no matter how your character interacts with their friends or w/e) how does the world see that character with little/no prior knowledge. this is really helpful for establishing consistent character behavior without leaning on the "crutch" of internal monologue or narration. it's essentially the character version of the imagery and sense exercises.
ouroboros puzzle - basically, write a full-circle "piece" that ends where it begins. you can either start in media res and mess with time, put your character in a "habitual loop", go totally abstract with it, whatever. this one is hard to explain, but once you get the hang of it it's really fun and can help you work on adding temporal depth to your stories. like, it helps you work on the sense of scale/time before and after your story's physical boundaries, if that makes sense. the best example i can offer is that i once wrote a short horror piece about a possessed victorian lady who keeps killing every priest who tries to exorcise her because she doesn't understand that she's possessed, but i had to convey the "loop" of that through one interaction with one priest.
AU prompts - also straightforward, pick two characters and write an interaction with them in an AU setting while trying to keep them as close to their "actual" character as possible, and/or use an AU setting to tease out a part of their character that is harder to address in canon. This works for both fanfic and original stuff too! this is basically an alternate version of the "voice" exercise for characters that you are more familiar with and want to poke around with at an intermediate level.
read "regular" books a few times a year - okay, okay hear me out. even if you read like four non-fanfic books in the entire year, i cannot stress enough how exposure to different writing styles can help break you out of rut. i'm not even saying literary fiction or w/e here, it could be anything fiction. just immerse yourself in someone else's writing style for a bit because it can absolutely help get you out of your own head. fantasy/scifi is good for action, mystery/thriller is good for plot structure, romance is good for dialogue, horror is good for emotion/voice, etc. etc. also, it's fun! and i swear to you no "regular" book is going to be more time consuming than the 80k fanfic you can chew through at 2:00AM.
i'm talking about HoO because that's apparently where I am right now. TLH: was never gonna work because Riordan never put two brain cells into backstory. Camp Jupiter is so underdeveloped and the result of that leads to Jason also being under developed. A boy shaped by duty with no memory to who deserves his patronage. We didn't know him, he didn't know himself. It was an identity crisis never actualized. He had no memories to get back because the author never thought that far which is juxtaposed with percy in the next book because we know what he lost. And Jason becomes a nothingburger in his lack of connections and strong feelings. He didn't know his sister, his home, his patron goddess, his godly father. what the hell. Piper who so desperately needed a consultant in her everything, follows the misogynistic trend of PJO in trivializing the Aphrodite cabin. The violation that is the mind manipulation that the trio faced is crazy, but also i feel extra crazy for her since a lot of her story focused on her thing with Jason. And we still never get clarification of what actually happened to them during this mindfuck time. But besides that, she's in the aftermath of Titan War in camp and I hate how her mother's cabin is treated/how it's never really impressed that this is a community that was ravaged by war. The last we knew from this world was war. Silena betrayed camp and died and her little sister, less than a year later, is acting mean and petty...#JusticeforDrew. So much to say on love and grief but no let's talk about mean girls 3. Also i'm not native but tristan mclean distancing himself and piper from their heritage felt more like rick not wanting to put more work into it than legit. but also native ideas of seeing land beyond property bc flattening it as such is destructive and the work of the colonizer is just something i think could have been explored since i think everything should tie into your main plotline. (vs Gaea. Like literally what is her villain ethos?)
Leo I actually don't have much of a problem with here, but I think the foundations for peace outside of a relationship should've been set as much as foreshadowing about his future insecurity of being the third/seventh wheel.
The way i have wayyy more opinions now is crazy
i do like the percy side story that i'm doing in prayers for a savior, but shootttt the more i write him the more i'm forced to reckon that I'm writing him out of the main story and i preemptively miss him!!
It’s crazy writing my qualms about HoO without articulating my narrative issues with it solely because I wanna keep my niche rewrite idea fresh in my head
messages by Pom Pom squad is so Reyna
guys, i've been writing the octavian character bible for this HoO rewrite and it held my detailed understanding of the Reyna-Jason-Octavian dynamic and his schemes to power and his familial relationship as well as the religious relationships and just really fleshing him out so he can exist as a character...and I lost it
the cursed trio’s: there’s an angry man in your house vs the lost trio’s: there’s no one home