I originally planned to take a day and update again at noon tomorrow, but I suddenly discovered that from now to noon tomorrow, there are all classes and tasks, and since the update time has been advanced, I actually still have to stay up late coding in a hurry without combing through it at all. It’s time for the plot, so please take another day and update again at noon on Wednesday.
Let me tell you that our second volume is not over yet.
From the end of one volume to the present, the original purpose of creation was to end the first volume in a low-key, relaxed and refreshing way. It was my first time to write a book and I really thought about it for a long time. I still remember the same feeling as Kevin - —How to write a plot that is simply pretending to be cool?
I really analyzed it like a problem solver. To make the plot of the martial arts competition enjoyable, it is necessary to pave the way from both internal and external aspects. Firstly, the protagonist needs this champion very much, such as...; secondly, the external situation is urgent. He needs to win this championship, for example...
But obviously, all the conflicts I planned at the beginning did not come to fruition when the Wubi broke out. Before the Wubi, our conflicts had almost been resolved, so we had to take another path and another emotion.
However, I did write a down-to-earth, pretentious slap in the face about this episode, which I believe will be helpful for subsequent writing.
Of course, many issues can be analyzed during the creation process, but I won’t go into a long discussion. I will just briefly summarize it, that is, Wubi is an emotionally driven plot. It is really hard to design and foreshadow the emotions, and sometimes some plots have to be abandoned. logic.
And now that I have finished writing, I think that emotion-driven is not as good as plot-driven. That is to say, judging from my own writing experience, sometimes I don’t really like the emotions I have laid out. I feel better when I write the plot.
Maybe, it would be easier too?
Of course, we are not going to two extremes. Emotions and plot are definitely integrated. One is to focus on foreshadowing the emotions in a relatively simple plot, and some small plots also serve to foreshadow the emotions; the other is to write a more proud plot and work hard. It is complex and reasonable, focusing on the logic and explosive points of the plot itself, and then the emotions will come out naturally.
Of course, this is just my superficial and current experience after writing just 700,000 words. I will simply share it.
Then I haven’t thought about the following plot yet. I really feel that after finishing 4,000 words every day, I have no time and energy to think about the subsequent plot. I remember that there was a very ancient golden finger, in which the protagonist's time flow rate was different, and the aura concentration was also different. It would be great if I had this thing.
(With this thing, you only use it to write books?)
Anyway, I'm going to take another day off to sort out my subsequent writing, and then mainly just take it easy on my own.