Look you want chat gpt to stop glazing the shit out of you take these categories: Narrative Structure & Plot Development, Characterization, Prose & Style, Dialogue, World-Building or Setting (if applicable), Originality & Creative Risk, Emotional & Thematic Impact. Give these categories tochat GPT and then start making him compare chapter by chapter with a well known story like LOTM then you'll get the truth. Obviously tell it to be rigurous and unbiased throughout the comparaison.
Try Shinji_Nubeko's instruction; it's partially effective for getting objective feedback. I used it for my novel. I consider it mediocre, yet on the first day of publication on Webnovel, I achieved many views, comments, and collections. I'm not exaggerating when I say that in a single day, it surpassed novels that had been published for a month. However, it practically told me that my first chapter was mediocre, and honestly, I agree with the criticism.
Critical Evaluation of "The Drunken Prince’s Harem Only Accepts Saints and Queens"
Chapter 1: The Imperial Princess
1. Internal Evaluation (Chapter Analysis)
Narrative Structure and Plot Development: Analysis: The chapter functions as a prologue or an introductory vignette centered on a single scene. The structure is coherent, and the pacing is deliberately slow, focusing on sensory description and psychological tension. It effectively establishes the central conflict: the dichotomy between the public and private lives of the protagonists. The climax is the sexual act, which resolves the immediate erotic tension but accentuates the thematic conflict when the characters must return to their roles. It introduces the arc of the forbidden relationship but does not advance an external plot.
Score: 7/10. As an opening, it is effective for hooking the reader through shock and intimacy, but it sacrifices the introduction of the world and the main plot.
Characterization: Analysis: Characterization is the strongest point of the chapter. Wei Feng is presented as a dominant, hedonistic, and perceptive figure who wields absolute power in intimacy. Wei Yao is revealed as a passionate and dual woman, trapped between her desire and the suffocating public image of purity she must maintain. The power dynamic between them is clearly established. Their voices are distinct, and their motivations (his control, her surrender) are consistent within the scene.
Score: 8/10. It presents characters with complex duality and potent internal conflict from the outset.
Prose and Style: Analysis: The style is direct, sensory, and intimate, suitable for the erotic nature of the scene. It uses descriptive language ("Moonlight traced the contours of a body the empire idolized as a symbol of purity") and functional metaphors ("knew like a map of pleasure"). The prose is fluid, and the rhythm matches the action, becoming more fragmented in moments of heightened excitement. The tone is consistent and successfully creates a charged and possessive atmosphere.
Score: 8/10. The prose is effective, evocative, and serves its purpose without becoming overly flowery.
Dialogue: Analysis: The dialogue is stylized and functional for the erotic scene; it doesn't aim for mundane realism. Each line serves to advance the power dynamic and reveal the characters' personalities. The voices are clearly distinguishable: his is a low, authoritative, and provocative murmur; hers is longing and pleading.
Score: 7/10. Functional and effective for its context, though highly stylized.
World-building: Analysis: World-building is almost non-existent. We are given hints of a fantasy empire setting (princess, imperial seals, brocade robes, dawn bells), but these are generic elements that serve only as a backdrop for the characters' drama. There is no cultural, historical, or magical depth.
Score: 3/10. The world is a minimal and undeveloped stage.
Originality and Creative Risk: Analysis: The creative risk is very high. Starting a novel with an explicit incestuous scene is a bold and provocative decision that immediately defines the work's tone and filters its audience. While the "forbidden love" trope is not new, the direct, unvarnished execution from the first page is risky.
Score: 8/10. The audacity of the thematic and structural choice for an initial chapter is notable.
Emotional and Thematic Impact: Analysis: The primary impact is visceral and psychological, centered on desire, submission, and power dynamics. It powerfully introduces themes of public-private duality, freedom in transgression, and the oppression of social roles. For a reader receptive to these themes, the impact is potent, and the scene is highly memorable.
Score: 8/10. Achieves a strong and targeted emotional impact, establishing its central themes unforgettably.
2. Rigorous Comparative Evaluation (vs. "The Lord of the Rings")
Narrative Structure (Chapter 1 vs. LotR - "A Long-Expected Party"): The novel opts for an in media res hook, prioritizing immediate character conflict over world exposition. Its focus is microscopic and psychological. In contrast, Tolkien uses his first chapter as an expansive foundation for the world, introducing Hobbit culture, the history of the Ring, and character backstories gradually and naturally. LotR's approach is macroscopic and foundational. The novel seeks immediate, provocative impact; LotR seeks to build slow, deep investment.
Characterization (Wei Feng/Yao vs. Frodo/Bilbo/Gandalf): The novel introduces its characters through their most intimate and secret selves, revealing their duality and internal conflict from the beginning. Tolkien, on the other hand, presents his characters through their social roles and public image. We learn about Bilbo through his reputation and his speech; about Frodo, through his relationship with Bilbo. Their depth is revealed over many chapters as a response to plot challenges. The novel's method is an instant psychological dissection; Tolkien's is a gradual sociological development.
Prose and Style: The novel's style is sensual, intimate, and focused on physical sensation and internal emotion. Tolkien's is epic, formal, and often has a mythical or historical quality. The novel's prose seeks the immediacy and intimacy of a close-up; Tolkien's seeks the majesty and timelessness of a panoramic landscape. They are stylistic opposites, each effective for its purpose.
World-building: Here, the comparison highlights the difference in priorities. Chapter 1 of the novel uses the world as a mere backdrop. In contrast, "A Long-Expected Party" is a masterclass in organic world-building. Tolkien integrates history, culture, geography, and the nature of the central conflict into dialogues and descriptions that feel completely natural. In LotR, the world is a character in itself; in this novel's first chapter, it is barely a prop.
Originality and Creative Risk: Both works take significant risks, but of different natures. The novel's risk is thematic and tonal, choosing a taboo (incest) and explicit subject to hook and/or alienate the reader. Tolkien's risk was of an unprecedented scale and ambition: building a complete mythology with the seriousness of real history, defining a genre for generations to come. Tolkien's risk had an immeasurably greater literary impact, but the novel's audacity in its own context is undeniable.
Awaiting the next chapter to continue the evaluation.
Try Shinji_Nubeko's instruction; it's partially effective for getting objective feedback. I used it for my novel. I consider it mediocre, yet on the first day of publication on Webnovel, I achieved many views, comments, and collections. I'm not exaggerating when I say that in a single day, it surpassed novels that had been published for a month. However, it practically told me that my first chapter was mediocre, and honestly, I agree with the criticism.
Critical Evaluation of "The Drunken Prince’s Harem Only Accepts Saints and Queens"
Chapter 1: The Imperial Princess
1. Internal Evaluation (Chapter Analysis)
Narrative Structure and Plot Development: Analysis: The chapter functions as a prologue or an introductory vignette centered on a single scene. The structure is coherent, and the pacing is deliberately slow, focusing on sensory description and psychological tension. It effectively establishes the central conflict: the dichotomy between the public and private lives of the protagonists. The climax is the sexual act, which resolves the immediate erotic tension but accentuates the thematic conflict when the characters must return to their roles. It introduces the arc of the forbidden relationship but does not advance an external plot. Score: 7/10. As an opening, it is effective for hooking the reader through shock and intimacy, but it sacrifices the introduction of the world and the main plot.
Characterization: Analysis: Characterization is the strongest point of the chapter. Wei Feng is presented as a dominant, hedonistic, and perceptive figure who wields absolute power in intimacy. Wei Yao is revealed as a passionate and dual woman, trapped between her desire and the suffocating public image of purity she must maintain. The power dynamic between them is clearly established. Their voices are distinct, and their motivations (his control, her surrender) are consistent within the scene. Score: 8/10. It presents characters with complex duality and potent internal conflict from the outset.
Prose and Style: Analysis: The style is direct, sensory, and intimate, suitable for the erotic nature of the scene. It uses descriptive language ("Moonlight traced the contours of a body the empire idolized as a symbol of purity") and functional metaphors ("knew like a map of pleasure"). The prose is fluid, and the rhythm matches the action, becoming more fragmented in moments of heightened excitement. The tone is consistent and successfully creates a charged and possessive atmosphere. Score: 8/10. The prose is effective, evocative, and serves its purpose without becoming overly flowery.
Dialogue: Analysis: The dialogue is stylized and functional for the erotic scene; it doesn't aim for mundane realism. Each line serves to advance the power dynamic and reveal the characters' personalities. The voices are clearly distinguishable: his is a low, authoritative, and provocative murmur; hers is longing and pleading. Score: 7/10. Functional and effective for its context, though highly stylized.
World-building: Analysis: World-building is almost non-existent. We are given hints of a fantasy empire setting (princess, imperial seals, brocade robes, dawn bells), but these are generic elements that serve only as a backdrop for the characters' drama. There is no cultural, historical, or magical depth. Score: 3/10. The world is a minimal and undeveloped stage.
Originality and Creative Risk: Analysis: The creative risk is very high. Starting a novel with an explicit incestuous scene is a bold and provocative decision that immediately defines the work's tone and filters its audience. While the "forbidden love" trope is not new, the direct, unvarnished execution from the first page is risky. Score: 8/10. The audacity of the thematic and structural choice for an initial chapter is notable.
Emotional and Thematic Impact: Analysis: The primary impact is visceral and psychological, centered on desire, submission, and power dynamics. It powerfully introduces themes of public-private duality, freedom in transgression, and the oppression of social roles. For a reader receptive to these themes, the impact is potent, and the scene is highly memorable. Score: 8/10. Achieves a strong and targeted emotional impact, establishing its central themes unforgettably.
2. Rigorous Comparative Evaluation (vs. "The Lord of the Rings")
Narrative Structure (Chapter 1 vs. LotR - "A Long-Expected Party"): The novel opts for an in media res hook, prioritizing immediate character conflict over world exposition. Its focus is microscopic and psychological. In contrast, Tolkien uses his first chapter as an expansive foundation for the world, introducing Hobbit culture, the history of the Ring, and character backstories gradually and naturally. LotR's approach is macroscopic and foundational. The novel seeks immediate, provocative impact; LotR seeks to build slow, deep investment.
Characterization (Wei Feng/Yao vs. Frodo/Bilbo/Gandalf): The novel introduces its characters through their most intimate and secret selves, revealing their duality and internal conflict from the beginning. Tolkien, on the other hand, presents his characters through their social roles and public image. We learn about Bilbo through his reputation and his speech; about Frodo, through his relationship with Bilbo. Their depth is revealed over many chapters as a response to plot challenges. The novel's method is an instant psychological dissection; Tolkien's is a gradual sociological development.
Prose and Style: The novel's style is sensual, intimate, and focused on physical sensation and internal emotion. Tolkien's is epic, formal, and often has a mythical or historical quality. The novel's prose seeks the immediacy and intimacy of a close-up; Tolkien's seeks the majesty and timelessness of a panoramic landscape. They are stylistic opposites, each effective for its purpose.
World-building: Here, the comparison highlights the difference in priorities. Chapter 1 of the novel uses the world as a mere backdrop. In contrast, "A Long-Expected Party" is a masterclass in organic world-building. Tolkien integrates history, culture, geography, and the nature of the central conflict into dialogues and descriptions that feel completely natural. In LotR, the world is a character in itself; in this novel's first chapter, it is barely a prop.
Originality and Creative Risk: Both works take significant risks, but of different natures. The novel's risk is thematic and tonal, choosing a taboo (incest) and explicit subject to hook and/or alienate the reader. Tolkien's risk was of an unprecedented scale and ambition: building a complete mythology with the seriousness of real history, defining a genre for generations to come. Tolkien's risk had an immeasurably greater literary impact, but the novel's audacity in its own context is undeniable.
Awaiting the next chapter to continue the evaluation.
Prompt:
You are an expert and absolutely impartial literary critic. Your objective is to conduct an objective and rigorous evaluation of a novel, focusing exclusively on its literary merits and demerits, without any personal preference.
The evaluation will be conducted under the following main categories:
Narrative Structure and Plot Development:
- Coherence and pacing.
- Handling of plot twists and climax.
- Progression of tension and resolution of conflicts.
- Existence and effectiveness of a main plot arc and secondary arcs.
- Handling of subplots and their integration.
Characterization:
- Depth and complexity of main and secondary characters.
- Consistency of their motivations and actions.
- Character development throughout the story (character arcs).
- Distinctiveness and memorability of character voices and personalities.
Prose and Style:
- Clarity and precision.
- Originality and distinctiveness of the narrative voice.
- Effective use of rhetorical figures (metaphors, similes, etc.) without falling into exaggeration or cliché.
- Fluidity and rhythm of the writing.
- Consistency of tone.
Dialogue:
- Naturalness and realism (or consistency with the world's style if not realistic).
- Function of dialogues (reveal character, advance plot, world-building).
- Distinctiveness of voices among characters.
- Brevity and conciseness.
World-building:
- Originality and internal coherence of the world.
- Depth of the setting (culture, history, magic/technology, geography).
- Organic integration of world information into the narrative without resorting to info-dumping.
- Capacity for immersion.
Originality and Creative Risk:
- Degree to which the work deviates from genre conventions.
- Proposal of novel ideas or unique perspectives.
- Boldness in the execution of the plot or characters.
- Ability to surprise or challenge reader expectations.
Emotional and Thematic Impact:
- Emotional resonance of the story.
- Exploration of significant themes (love, loss, power, morality, etc.).
- Ability to provoke reflection or discussion.
- Memorability of the messages or feelings the work leaves behind.
KEY INSTRUCTIONS FOR RIGOROUS COMPARATIVE EVALUATION:
Once you have the novel text provided, we will proceed as follows:
Initial (Internal) Evaluation: You will evaluate each chapter of the novel under the seven categories mentioned, assigning a score (e.g., 1 to 10 or a justified qualitative scale) and a detailed justification for each, based solely on the content of the chapter in question. You will not make general judgments until the end.
Comparative Preparation: After your internal evaluation, I will ask you to compare each chapter, point by point, with equivalent chapters or thematic sections from the canonical work "The Lord of the Rings" (LOTR) by J.R.R. Tolkien. The comparison must be:
- Rigorous: Supported by concrete examples and textual analysis.
- Impartial: Without favoritism, acknowledging strengths and weaknesses of both works in relation to the evaluated category.
- Objective: Based on recognized literary principles and not on subjective tastes.
- Focused: The comparison with LOTR will serve as a reference point to highlight the effectiveness or areas for improvement of the novel being evaluated, not to disqualify it.
Chapter-by-Chapter Process: I will present the novel to you chapter by chapter. After each chapter, you must:
- First, offer your detailed analysis and scoring for that chapter under the 7 categories.
- Then, perform the specific comparison with LOTR, highlighting how the elements of that chapter compare (in terms of technique, impact, development, etc.) with those of LOTR in the same categories. For example: "Regarding character building, Frodo's development in chapter X of LOTR shows Y, while [Character Name]'s character in this chapter demonstrates Z..."
Final Conclusion: Only upon completion of the evaluation of all chapters and their comparisons will you be asked to offer a general conclusion about the novel, synthesizing its strengths and weaknesses, and its potential, always under the established objective criteria.