AchtungNight
Lech Master
- Joined
- May 19, 2006
- Posts
- 4,685
Make sure your villains make sense with the setting and characters. If you’re in a college setting, bring in a bully boyfriend, an overprotective parent, or a jerk teacher. For celebrities, involve the paparazzi and perhaps a gossip monger backing them (my story Counseling did this). Redeem your villain if possible- can Harley Quinn work with Batman if he gets her away from Joker? Throw Punchline at Joker if he still needs a girlfriend. If you’re writing in fantasy, the evil sorcerer kidnapping the princess is an obvious villain. The knight and his bisexual dragon mount who can transform into a human rescue the princess and she grabs the sorcerer’s spell book after he’s defeated. Or replace the sorcerer with a terrorist leader for a modern military story. Or an alien overlord for science fiction.
Or don’t use villains. Just have a bad girl romance a good guy and take it from there. Or reverse it if you like bad boy vs good girl. Or two girls or two guys. Your decision.
Or don’t use villains. Just have a bad girl romance a good guy and take it from there. Or reverse it if you like bad boy vs good girl. Or two girls or two guys. Your decision.