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Belief System Generator. Animism: Non-human entities (animals, plants, things, natural forces) possess a spiritual essence, separate from (and the equal of) humanity. deism: A single creator-god who is separate/distinct from creation, and is not presently active in the created universe. henotheism: A single creator-god is worshipped, but adherents acknowledge/accept the existence of other/outsider gods. monotheism: A single creator-god who is separate/distinct from creation, but is active within the created world. nontheism: A model of moral living not based on a worship of divine/supernatural; real-world examples include Buddhism and Jainism.

Belief System Generator

Basilicus. 15 Questions Authors Should Ask Characters. How well do you know your character?

15 Questions Authors Should Ask Characters

We spend a lot of time creating characters. We think about names, where they live, who they love, whether or not they have a phobia or a personality disorder. We decide to place our characters in conflict with an antagonist in order to write a novel. 9 Fundamental Fears That Motivate Your Characters - Character Secrets. To write a great character in a screenplay or novel, it helps to have a model of human personality that rings true.

9 Fundamental Fears That Motivate Your Characters - Character Secrets

For writers of fiction, the model doesn’t need to be scientifically validated, but it does need to be useful. To be useful as a writing tool, the model must help us to: Creating a Story Bible: The Basics ‹ On Writing. Writing a novel isn’t easy.

Creating a Story Bible: The Basics ‹ On Writing

Tracking your world, your characters, and other important events can save you time and save you from plot holes before you even write them into existence. Writing all of that information down isn’t just scary — it can be a true nightmare! So, what can you do to keep track of all of the really important information? Magical World Builder. By, Stephanie Cottrell Bryant <map name="admap78618" id="admap78618"><area href=" shape="rect" coords="0,0,468,60" title="" alt="" target="_blank" /></map><table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" style="width:468px;border-style:none;background-color:#ffffff;"><tr><td><img src=" style="width:468px;height:60px;border-style:none;" usemap="#admap78618" alt="" /></td></tr><tr><td style="background-color:#ffffff;" colspan="1"><center><a style="font-size:10px;color:#0000ff;text-decoration:none;line-height:1.2;font-weight:bold;font-family:Tahoma, verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;text-transform: none;letter-spacing:normal;text-shadow:none;white-space:normal;word-spacing:normal;" href=" target="_blank">Ads by Project Wonderful!

Magical World Builder

Your ad here, right now: $0</a></center></td></tr></table> Fantasy Worldbuilding Questions. Maps Workshop — Developing the Fictional World through Mapping. Most of the books I’ve written have started with a map.

Maps Workshop — Developing the Fictional World through Mapping

Not with an idea, or a character, or a theme. With a hand-drawn map, doodled out first while I was sitting and keeping someone else company, or while I was on break, or when I couldn’t think of what to write and had no ideas to speak of and knew that if I drew a map something would come to me. Some of the maps were fairly artistic from the start. Some began on napkins or the backs of throw-away paper, and only became things of any artistic merit after they’d served their initial purpose of handing me an idea for a novel. Fictional World Building Guide, Resources & Ideas. Creating Fantasy Nations (World Building II) By this point you've got your map and the basics for one of your ideas.

Creating Fantasy Nations (World Building II)

It's time to put people on these continents. If you haven't already, ask yourself the basics about each culture you want to generate. Taken from World Building I, those are: What are the needs of this culture? Magical World Builder. Worldbuilding: 10 Questions to Create Fictional Cultures. The way I build worlds is by collecting cool stuff from the history, myth and people around me.

Worldbuilding: 10 Questions to Create Fictional Cultures

I blend these details with my own imagination, and create my own cultures. Culture is a vital part to realistic worldbuilding. Normally there are a few particular cultures that interest me at a given time. 10 Ways To Create A Near-Future World That Won't Look Too Dated.