Romantic hijinks. Nothing breaks up the flow of a story better than all the emphasis placed on romance. I'm not here to watch a romantic comedy, I'm here to kill the bad guy. Shut up.
Also, "Here, take this pretty girl who is the last member of some obscure race. She will inevitably save/destroy the world. Look how witty and trendy she is! Look at her use that magical staff!"
Normally, any characters that were so weak--you'd throw off to the side and never use again but because she's a
plotpoint, they're making me look after her. And now I have to watch the hero fumble around and do the romance thing and I just don't care.
But, just as bad is the wanna-be badass girl. The, "Look, I wear leather, I dress like I just escaped from the Battlestar Galactica strip club. Don't flirt with me, I'll shoot your balls off! But you grab me by the arm or speak to me
just so and I turn into a puddle of useless. Oh wait, despite all the trash I talk, I already am useless. No one will ever notice because I have breasts! Hold still so I can angst all over you."
Perfect heroes are annoying. It makes me want to slap the pretentiousness right out of them.
Also, villains with no purpose. I like a villain to have a goal. "Destroy the World" is not an adequate goal. Or at least if you can't be assed to come up with one, be like The Joker. He does it all because it's fun. That is acceptable--but only for certain villains. Make your villains someone that a little piece of us can identify with--especially if they're human beings. That way we end up thinking about if we might ever do what the villain is doing. Make us think about ourselves.
But worse than that is the cop-out villain (otherwise known as: Sailor Moon Villain Syndrome). Because for a villain to suddenly change his ways at the very end--after all the trouble he's caused....that's just a waste of time. Kill him anyway.
Jaqen Hghar said:
Elivercury said:
As for ACTUAL plot devices... again not so much on the plot device front but i do dislike it when a writer is afraid to actually let any of their characters die. By which i mean like a MAIN character, not someone we've known for 10 pages and were never going to see again anyway.
Oh, you gonna love A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin. Let us just say it is one of the most realistic fantasy series I have read. I can write out a spoiler or two if you want, but I'd rather not.
Props. A Song of Fire and Ice is a truly fantastic series. The best fantasy series I've ever read. Martin doesn't rose-color anything. It's awesome.