ThisAdamGuy
Proud inventor of the chocolate onion
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2024
- Messages
- 1,010
- Points
- 128
Sorry for posting two threads so close together, but this is kinda piggybacking off my other one. I was thinking about what it was that drew people to the harem genre, and the obvious answer is that it's pure wish fulfillment. I'm fine with wish fulfillment, and think it's a key part of storytelling as a concept. Even if a character's story is horribly tragic, there's a part of us that wants to experience that for ourselves, or else we wouldn't want to read about it. That makes it wish fulfillment. We don't call something like Lord of the Rings or Wheel of Time wish fulfillment, but books with harems or OP main characters are. Books like Harry Potter and Twilight might or might not be wish fulfillment, depending on who you ask. So I'm curious, when do you think a story crosses the line between "just a normal story" to "wish fulfillment fantasy"?
For me, I think it's when it becomes obvious that the author cares more about the destination than the journey. The main character might train to get stronger, but the process of getting stronger isn't as important as being strong, if you get what I mean. The hero doesn't meet women to flesh out the world and provide insight into themselves or the other characters, they're just there to justify a slightly different flavor of spice than what the hero already has available.
If the author can make the journey itself feel like an important and well thought out part of the story, then it doesn't qualify as wish fulfillment to me. Or at least not pure wish fulfillment. Wish fulfillment stories will either fast forward through the boring parts to give the hero what they want, or it'll skip them entirely. Like in Dungeon Diving 101, Ken has two hot classmates practically begging to be his girlfriend after just knowing him for a couple days. Then after scoring with them, a monster drops a ring, he bends down to pick it up, and in doing so inadvertently asks the elf princess (who he conveniently failed to notice up to that point) to marry him, causing her to instantly fall in love with him too.
On the other hand, Rand has a three-girl harem by the end of WOT, but it's obvious to anyone who's read it that the whole story wasn't written just to justify giving him that harem. So while it shares certain things with the harem genre, it's a story with a harem, and not a harem story.
Where do you guys draw the line?
For me, I think it's when it becomes obvious that the author cares more about the destination than the journey. The main character might train to get stronger, but the process of getting stronger isn't as important as being strong, if you get what I mean. The hero doesn't meet women to flesh out the world and provide insight into themselves or the other characters, they're just there to justify a slightly different flavor of spice than what the hero already has available.
If the author can make the journey itself feel like an important and well thought out part of the story, then it doesn't qualify as wish fulfillment to me. Or at least not pure wish fulfillment. Wish fulfillment stories will either fast forward through the boring parts to give the hero what they want, or it'll skip them entirely. Like in Dungeon Diving 101, Ken has two hot classmates practically begging to be his girlfriend after just knowing him for a couple days. Then after scoring with them, a monster drops a ring, he bends down to pick it up, and in doing so inadvertently asks the elf princess (who he conveniently failed to notice up to that point) to marry him, causing her to instantly fall in love with him too.
On the other hand, Rand has a three-girl harem by the end of WOT, but it's obvious to anyone who's read it that the whole story wasn't written just to justify giving him that harem. So while it shares certain things with the harem genre, it's a story with a harem, and not a harem story.
Where do you guys draw the line?
Last edited: