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Public card / plot challenges
Hello, all! I wanted to stretch my plotting muscles, so I decided to tackle some seven-sentence stories (or seven-sentence summaries). To jump-start my thinking and give myself a set of creative constraints to work with, I put together a Bingo card for them. I'm amused by it, so I thought I'd share it with everyone.
I used the Demographics/Random Sets generator to put together a situation (taken from the Bingo Generator's list of Polti's 36 classical dramatic situations), a setting (taken from ysabetwordsmith's list of setting tropes), and a complication (taken from
ysabetwordsmith's list of dramatic situations). I had the Demographics/Random Sets generator make sure to "Use each option only once per generated set", so that I wouldn't end up with repeats in situation, setting, or complication. Then, after I generated the random sets, I had the sets generator port the values over into the bingo generator.
The Demographics/Random Sets generator is still a bit buggy and clunky, but if you're willing to put up with its occasional misbehavior (like: occasionally buttons don't work; occasionally when you're trying to load a set of values from a comma-separated list, the list will be empty, and you'll have to re-load the list again and delete the duplicate empty list at the end), you can get it to do fun things like this. I've done "universe/worldbuilding prompt/word count goal" bingo cards; you could also do "a person, in a place, with a problem" combinations to kick off your plotting.
Anyway, just wanted to let people know that that was available to play with, and that hopefully I'll be able to continue to tweak and refine it. Here's the card I made, and feel free to play with it in any way you feel like:
Situation: Deliverance Setting: Forbidden Zone Complication: I Told You So |
Situation: Revolt Setting: Spy School Complication: Out of Ammo |
Situation: Abduction Setting: Bug War Complication: Hopelessly Outnumbered |
Situation: Self-sacrifice for kin Setting: Torture Cellar Complication: Keep It Safe from Them |
Situation: Daring enterprise Setting: Elevator Complication: Something Went Click |
Situation: Self-sacrifice for an ideal Setting: Genius Loci Complication: Are You a God? |
Situation: Pursuit Setting: Inside a Computer System Complication: Stranded in a Blizzard |
Situation: Obtaining Setting: Underground City Complication: Caught in Bed Together |
Situation: Ambition Setting: Abandoned Laboratory Complication: On Fire |
Situation: An enemy loved Setting: Hotel California Complication: It Looks Hungry |
Situation: Crime pursued by vengeance Setting: Red Light District Complication: Everything Is Spiders |
Situation: Involuntary crimes of love Setting: City of Canals Complication: Pinned by a Boulder |
Situation: Recovery of a lost one Setting: After the End Complication: Hull Breach |
Situation: Conflict with a god Setting: Prehistory Complication: It's a Bomb! |
Situation: Remorse Setting: Youth Center Complication: Stumbling in the Dark |
Situation: Crimes of love Setting: Golden Age of Piracy Complication: Snake Pit |
Situation: Adultery Setting: The War Room Complication: It Happens to a Lot of Guys |
Situation: Slaying of kin unrecognized Setting: Last Fertile Region Complication: I Thought You Brought It |
Situation: Rivalry of kin Setting: Opium Den Complication: No Parachute |
Situation: Enmity of kin Setting: Sapient Ship Complication: Falsely Accused |
Situation: Discovery of the dishonour of a loved one Setting: Herland Complication: Knife in the Back |
Situation: Supplication Setting: Cardboard Prison Complication: Locked in with Monster |
Situation: The enigma Setting: Galactic Sargasso Complication: Only One Spacesuit Left |
Situation: Erroneous judgement Setting: Death World Complication: ... 05 ... 04 ... 03 ... |
Situation: Fatal imprudence Setting: Bazaar of the Bizarre Complication: Naked in Public |
no subject
It just occurred to me that I might be able to use the bingo system and some quick javascript to help me plot/outline a novella. It's a format I'm not really versed in, and this might be just the thing to unbog me.
Yes...
Also, I recommend the book The Fiction Writer's Silent Partner which has lists of things like settings, character types, plot complications, etc. It's meant to be used for brainstorming before a story, or browsed when you're stuck.
no subject
Still, it's a fun idea. And things like this are pretty cool when it comes to jumpstarting creative work.
If you do end up expanding this with some interesting JS, I hope you'll share!
Hmm...
Though I admit it would be rather awesome to have a graphic option that would actually lay out the seven boxes along a peak line, or a time line that could be printed out as a chain. Hrm, a more complicated version would be if you could select how many steps in the chain you wanted, like we have 3x3 or 5x5 bingo cards now.
no subject
Obviously, in a just-for-fun setting, this all matters less; playing with constraints, apparent contradictions, and counterintuitive things stretches the creative muscles and can be a lot of fun. And you do see that sort of fun, quirky randomness in things like the card up above. But when I start thinking about things systematically – and I do see plots and overall story structure as a systematic thing – I want to see more interaction between the individual elements.
It would be pretty easy to set up lists in the demographics generator which pulled setting, character, and situation values and stuck them into the various plot forms – you can pretty much set that up in the generators as they are now. But for a more sophisticated plot arc generator, there's a lot of meta thinking that I'm not sure how I'd model in programming terms.
Hmm...
Okay, I see where you're coming from there.
For me, part of the fun to random generation is precisely that it makes freaky things which challenge me to devise a way in which they could work. Take your Plot Challenges sample. Some of the boxes obviously stacked well, like "Situation: Deliverance, Setting: Forbidden Zone, Complication: I Told You So." Others demand more creativity such as "Situation: Involuntary crimes of love, Setting: City of Canals, Complication: Pinned by a Boulder."
So I would be okay with a plotline that didn't make sense at first and needed to be justified in the story.
I think it would be helpful to have a row option (7 steps, 9 steps, whatever) that we could use with the prompt lists we have now -- especially for folks who are good enough to make stacked boxes and import them into the bingo generator. Then if you have ideas or time later to make a more refined plot generator, I'm sure authors would be thrilled to have the expanded option.
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One of my current series, Tripping into the Future, begins with using time travel as a weapon of mass destruction.