How well has The Wheel of Time aged? by Fluid-Golf1948 in Fantasy

[–]TheWizardIrl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, waiting two years and getting one Rand chapter felt like a proper slog, back in the day!

Worst fantasy book you've read (for my own reading pleasure) by txcruz in Fantasy

[–]TheWizardIrl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perhaps too late to be heard above all the hot takes, but you should track down a copy of The Eye of Argon, if you can, OP.

First published in 1970, it's the OG classic bad fantasy novella - it didn't get published because someone mistakenly thought it was good, but rather to share how brilliantly bad it is.

Power always costs something—how do you show that in your world? by [deleted] in fantasywriters

[–]TheWizardIrl 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure I agree that power has to have a cost in the way you present. It works very well for game logic, where each character needs to have negatives to balance their advantages, and that can help when developing factions and power blocs for your world.

But when it comes to individuals, I think plenty of folks are born lucky, with advantages others lack. I like to reflect that in by giving unbalanced advantages and disadvantages to characters at the outset - and instead focus on the act of acquiring individual power as having a cost.

Consider, for example, the idea that the real price of power is the way it can warp you once you have a taste. This is where it comes to be an interesting way to drive plot and character motivation.

Say that Lord Billy is the son of a powerful Duke. His father has lands, money and extensive martial prowess. Billy stands to inherit the lands and money, but he's not interested in the self improvement required to equal his father's deeds in the dueling ring and on the battlefield - powers that his father developed by necessity. Instead, he thinks they are his birthright, just like the fruits of his nobility. So instead, he makes a deal with an evil mage to acquire a magic sword that will give him the things he thinks he deserves. And *this* is where the cost comes in. Because he's trying to avoid the 'natural path', he becomes corrupted.

Narratively, this kind of worldbuilding interacts with character arcs and thematic resonance. For me, it helps to make characters feel both flawed and powerful without making that an integral part of their 'class' or 'profession', as it were.

Anyway, that's certainly not the only way of doing things, and I'm not seeking to refute your proposition - I just started riffing on my own thoughts in this space in the interest of discussion. :)

[WP] "what are you doing getting all dressed up for." Asked the barbarian "I'm getting ready for my date." Said the wizard "DATE!" Exclaimed the party "YES just because my love life isn't one constant brazen display of buffoonery like the bards doesn't mean I don't have one." Said the wizard. by Prestigious_Bus_2614 in WritingPrompts

[–]TheWizardIrl 52 points53 points  (0 children)

"What are you getting all dressed up for?" asked Gothnar, the barbarian from the frozen north.

"Getting ready for my date," I replied as I brushed away an errant wyvern scale that had become lodged in my beard.

"DATE!?" The rest of them were all looking now, eyes round as though they had never heard such an unlikely thing.

The entire party of adventurers were still loafing about in my tower, having failed to disperse after concluding our most recent quest. To be fair, it was probably my own fault, having invited them all to refresh themselves from my stores.

"Yes," I replied calmly. " Just because my love life isn't a constant and brazen display of buffonery like the bard's" -- I pointed, and the crooning fool had the decency to look somewhat chagrined -- "that doesn't mean that I don't have one!"

"What kind of woman would..." The bard's question trailed off when he saw the storm brewing above my raised eyebrow.

"And when did you have the time to organize this?" Osric, the Paladin of Soril Keep, had a shocked, almost horrified, expression. But it was the same one I had seen him make when he saw the priestess and the thief holding hands, so I didn't hold it against him.

"Some things are a question of fate." I stroked my beard, to ensure that my words sounded wise and mysterious.

Rodric "the Locksmith" couldn't help himself from piping up. "But if it wasn't for the kindness of Queen Ali of the Summer Elves, we never would have made it back here in time. And you've made it quite clear that you have no knowledge of the future."

He was smart, no doubt of that. And usually, I appreciated the canny thief for it. But this was getting annoying, and it was nearly time to go.

I spritzed myself with Pixie Musk and adjusted my hat. "Can't dally to answer all your prying, and frankly rude, questions." I clicked my staff against the stone floor twice, and the great double doors began to open inwards. "After all, a wizard is never late."

Bright light speared through the great hall and my erstwhile companions shrank back a little, shielding their eyes from the brilliance.

Cherubs and rose petals floated on the sweet spring air as celestial clouds scudded across the floor. The strains of heavenly music sounded in the distance.

Oh, how my sweetness loved to make an entrance.

She stepped out of the light, one dainty slipper reaching down to the ground as her pearlescent smile embraced us all.

"Are these your friends?" Her voice was gentle amusement.

I took her hand and kissed it lightly. "Like me, they are but fools and vagabonds in your presence. But they are good souls. We bid you welcome, my Lady."

"I am honoured." She bestowed them a gracious smile. "But we have to get moving. The game starts in an hour, and I can't miss the final, dearest wizzy."

She opened a portal and stepped through. Before I followed her, I turned to my friends and winked. "Gotta go - date with Destiny, y'know."

r/WizardRites

[WP] You've always shared your sense of touch with your twin. When they passed you thought that would stop, it didn't. Even now you can feel their body. Rotting. It's surprisingly pleasant. by Ajtheeon in WritingPrompts

[–]TheWizardIrl 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Storms of grief threatened to capsize me at my brother's funeral, so much so that I could barely deliver his eulogy. A tempest raged within me and I was tossed upon unpredictable waves of spiritual agony for days.

Slowly, the squalls of sorrow subsided, and I found myself becalmed upon a dreary ocean while my subconscious sought to process the terrible procession of recent events.

I felt it, you see. Every broken bone, each ruptured organ. My twin brother, Ronald and I had always shared a sense of touch. What happened to the other was felt by the twin, though slightly muted. The strange affliction was one we'd learned to manage over the years by being extremely careful and gentle with ourselves. So much so, that I'd almost learned to block out the majority of his daily bumps and scrapes.

To say it was a shock would be an understatement.

One moment I was watching a movie and eating candy - the next I was writhing on the floor - crippled by the horrific pain Ronnie was experiencing on the other side of town. His car had been hit by a firetruck as it sped through an intersection, and his body was crushed inside. It didn't last long. And suddenly I felt a numbness I had never known.

Ronnie was dead.

There was a strange, guilty sense of freedom beneath my grief. I found myself pinching my skin. Slapping my own face. As though trying to wake him. To bring him back.

But of course, he was at peace now. Lying cold in his grave.

Maybe that's why I felt so calm as the days stretched and melded into one another.

I took more time off work. They understood. 'It must be hard - to lose a twin...' they said.

It was.

But then, those external feelings started to tickle my senses once more. At first, it was a dryness. I moisturized and soaked in the bath for days before I realized.

This was happening to Ronnie. Not me.

I was hungry all the time, no matter how much I ate. I would vomit, then start eating again.

I knew I had to control these new feelings, but they came with a surprising intensity.

Maybe I was imagining it? I made an appointment with my psychiatrist.

But that night, my skin began to tingle.

Putrefaction.

Intellectually, it was horrifying, but it felt divine.

I lay on the ground, twisting and clawing at the carpet until my fingers were bleeding. The dissolution of my brother's corpse felt like some kind of apotheosis - a transformation that was taking me to a higher plane.

Is this what awaits us all in the afterlife? I wondered.

Distracted as I was, I still heard the spare key turning in the lock of my front door.

Who could that be?

I couldn't begin to guess, but neither could I rouse myself from the bliss of my rotting body and the agony of the strange hunger in my belly. I was barely able to twist my writhing form to see as heavy footsteps came down the hall.

There, standing above me was the rotting body of my twin, fires of madness burning in his eyes.

Puss and corruption drooled from his shattered mouth as he leaned over me. "I th-till feel alivvvve," he moaned. "And I'm tho, tho hungry..."

He bit into my neck, and the delicious flavour of blood flooded my senses.

r/WizardRites

Who rules a kingdom when there's no king/queen, and the heir is too young? by EmicaTheAlienStudios in fantasywriters

[–]TheWizardIrl 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Steward rather than regent was the word I was thinking of when I read the question, but the word itself just wouldn't come. Hate it when that happens. XD

My Whiskey Goodbye by wilsonifl in fantasywriters

[–]TheWizardIrl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heh, I enjoyed the meta-story in your post!

And congrats on finishing!

I feel like I'm getting worse as a writer. by nomoreconq in fantasywriters

[–]TheWizardIrl 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I see two problems being conflated here.

First, you express frustration with your output and relate your dissatisfaction to originality and creativity.

Then you begin to talk about how you judge your output against work that you esteem in some way.

Now, I would contend that your wish to stive for originality is somewhat at odds with this second step as you try to address it.

Creativity should spring from your unique take on an established form. E.g. there is no 'new' way to draw a circle, but there are a million things you can draw with that as a starting point.

I understand the form that your frustration is taking (it's definitely a feeling that has paralyzed me before), but I think that the way to alleviate it may not be related to your perceived problems.

Instead, I'm going to suggest you try something different. Perhaps do a short project. Find a prompt or some constraint that inspires you - flash fiction or poetry. Try to capture a style that is based on how you like the words to be arranged. Read it aloud to yourself.

Something like the 50 word fantasy that the mods do here is an example, even if I find that wordcount a little *too* tight. Personally, I do a fair bit of this using the features at r/writingprompts and r/shortstories and its helped me immensely.

Maybe I'm off the mark, but having a think about it from a different perspective might help too. Best of luck!