You know those creatures that have invaded the human world?! Not aliens, not predators, but ants.
They're everywhere... in the kitchen, in the living room, in my private room, and the worst part is, they're even trying to steal my coffee or sweet tea. I can only frown as I see my cup filled with ants.
Well, those who claim to be "good collaborators" can flood the fiction comment sections. But don't expect to be free here. Why? Because we are watching you!
Have you ever wanted to kill off a character? However, the narrative allowed the character to develop organically, and then you felt sorry for her/him and thought, "This character didn't deserve to die like that." Finally, you decided against killing her/him, at least for now.
Narrating life experiences into bedtime stories for children may be a good medium for educating children while strengthening the relationship between parents and their children.
Something about seeing your messages becoming more casual recently (using the words “dude,” “goat”) is like watching an android learning to become human. ??
Sometimes I miss... and want to read emotional stories. Like Kaori's final letter to Arima and Frodo and Sam's final journey on Mount Doom. It's a shame that fiction these days rarely showcases the emotional and human side. I want fiction that can make me cry.
Three chapters until the epilogue... I'm tired, my creativity is limited, time is limited, everything is limited... but I have to finish this fiction (at least volume 2 at this point). Because a good fiction is one that provides an ending.
A few people commit serious offenses, and then people with the same identity are punished collectively in the name of deterrence. What brilliant logic!
Good (not best) fiction is fiction that touches the reader's emotions. Often what readers care about is not the fiction's deep thematics, original premises, complex characters, living world, or suspenseful plots, but rather the most basic thing: touching the reader's emotions.

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