![]() This gives something for your characters to discuss and jumpstarts the creation of a story to share, which is especially important if it’s their first meeting as those threads are always in danger of feeling redundant and flat from the start.ĥ - Find your character’s voice (a.k.a. Do they have similar or conflicting interests? Are they from the same place or been to the same places? Is there something about them your character finds impressive or something that bothers them? Is your character’s personality one that might clash with theirs? Once you’ve got answers to any of these questions, have your starter comment on or insinuate something you’ve discovered. As you do this, pick out ways this character may relate to your character. If it’s a canon character and particularly if it’s one you’re not as familiar with, go beyond that and look them up on a fandom wiki, just make sure to recognize where the character may be canon divergent if they’re supposed to be. I could teach you!” Now there’s something you can easily respond back to!Ĥ - When writing a starter for an interaction with a character yours has yet to interact with, this should be a given, but read everything the mun has provided about that character. For example: Instead of your partner saying “You never know until you try” to the simple statement (creating another boring statement), by adding to yours you could invite them to say something like, “You never know until you try. Making a compound statement or more than one statement on a subject essentially gives people two things to work with, and responding to it will feel less restricting. Where did you learn to do that?” or, “I wish I could do that, but I don’t have anyone to teach me.” Adding a question of course never fails to give your partner something to respond to (and therefore can even be written by itself as it’s not a statement). By this I mean something like, “That’s cool” or, “I wish I could do that.” Instead say something like, “That’s cool. One muse is the good side of the personality and one the badĢ - Another tip for giving your partner something to respond to when it comes to one-liners or dialogue in general is to avoid saying single statements pertaining to one idea. Muse A is a witch/wizard/mage and is practicing a spell which backfires and splits them in two.Muse A travels back in time with instructions to kill their past self, Muse B.Muse A comes from the future and tries to stop Muse B making a mistake.Muse A discovers time travel and ends up back in time, meeting their past self, Muse B.Muse A is talking to themself in the mirror one day when their reflection, Muse B, starts talking back.When they do so they find Muse B stood on the over side Muse A accidentally discovers they can step through mirrors.‘I just saw a picture of you on my friend’s social media and holy fish sticks are we clones?’ AU.‘Hey stranger I noticed we look too much alike and basically please let me take pictures with you to confuse my friends/family’ AU.‘My neighbour just said we looked alike and I thought it was exaggeration but holy ducks we’re literally identical’ AU.
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