thegingernut
Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2025
- Messages
- 31
- Points
- 8
There's a certain kind of writer who writes an establishing scene and then writes episodic stories until they run out of them. If profession obligates them like in the case of Ranma ½ then when they run out of ideas or are canceled by executives for poor performance, they'll write a weak ending that answers the initial question of the show, without really considering all that happened in between. Without shareholders to appease, they'll abandon the project without ceremony.
Personally, I don't care for that. I actively avoid incomplete stories on scribblehub because I don't trust their writer to finish them. To me, a perpetually unanswered question is an act of intentional malice, designed to keep me coming back for what usually turns out to be a disappointing answer when they finally deign to reveal their lore. And I decided that if I'm going to write something, I better know how it ends before I start. As for how that's going… well stay tuned because the debts of my foreshadowing just came due.
If I never write a longform story again after this, well at least I'll have ended on my terms.
Personally, I don't care for that. I actively avoid incomplete stories on scribblehub because I don't trust their writer to finish them. To me, a perpetually unanswered question is an act of intentional malice, designed to keep me coming back for what usually turns out to be a disappointing answer when they finally deign to reveal their lore. And I decided that if I'm going to write something, I better know how it ends before I start. As for how that's going… well stay tuned because the debts of my foreshadowing just came due.
If I never write a longform story again after this, well at least I'll have ended on my terms.