Go ahead. I do have plans to write an MoR x Nasuverse (x Haruhi?) fic, but that’s far in the future, if ever. And this story is not that fic (though I picked up a few ideas from it).
How long do you intend to make it? It might be difficult to keep it funny if it goes on too long; this seems particularly vulnerable to Cerebus syndrome. (warning: TVTropes)
Although if it were to be long, we could crowdsource the research/ checking story ideas for OOCness/ checking story ideas for humour quotient/ keeping track of what the different factions are doing. (LW discussion thread, maybe?) Of course, Eliezer would be horrified at the blatant proliferation of spoilers, but this needs to be done FOR SCIENCE!! (It annoys me that most of the evidence we have about spoilers comes from laboratory studies or anecdotal evidence, even though it’s possible to do large-scale real-world experiments to answer the same questions.)
I have absolutely no qualms with Cerberus syndrome.
To be honest, I’d envisioned it working more by taking the Rule of Cool to unprecedented extremes than humor.
What about ‘crowdsourcing’ the writing? Create a master plotline, then have an MoR expert fill in those parts, a Ben 10 expert write those, etc. Then have someone edit it for consistent voice or something. Of course, that’s more of a group than a crowd, but whatever. It would simplify things, as I don’t feel smart enough to write Harry James Potter-Evans-Verres correctly.
But seriously, is anyone interested in collaborating on this?
Something like Gurren Lagann or Advent Children, then? Yeah, that’d work too. Except that in that case it probably wouldn’t be best to end it with Third Impact, but now I’m getting ahead of myself.
I was thinking of crowdsourcing more along these lines: Someone outlines what’s going to happen in the next few chapters. Someone else says ‘that makes no sense; character A is acting way OOC.’ Yet another person says, “Faction X wouldn’t make that move, it’s suicidal!!!” Another one says “Faction Y wouldn’t think of that move based on the information they have available.” And yet another says, “Faction Z won’t keep quiet about this, they need to move now!” And one more says, “By rule of cool, event Q needs to happen NOW!!” Someone else says, “Also, event P makes no sense given the rules of this universe, it needs to be axed.”
And after about a week of such squabbling, we’ve arrived at a coherent plot in which every character and faction acts in their best interests, based on the knowledge available to them and in accordance with their modus operandi and their competence. So someone writes that up while we move on to arguing about the next chapter.
This seems to me the simplest way of writing a fridge logic-free massively multiplayer crossover in which thirty xanatos pileups are inevitable.
I’ll tap out of this discussion for a while now, waiting to see what other people say.
Go ahead. I do have plans to write an MoR x Nasuverse (x Haruhi?) fic, but that’s far in the future, if ever. And this story is not that fic (though I picked up a few ideas from it).
How long do you intend to make it? It might be difficult to keep it funny if it goes on too long; this seems particularly vulnerable to Cerebus syndrome. (warning: TVTropes)
Although if it were to be long, we could crowdsource the research/ checking story ideas for OOCness/ checking story ideas for humour quotient/ keeping track of what the different factions are doing. (LW discussion thread, maybe?) Of course, Eliezer would be horrified at the blatant proliferation of spoilers, but this needs to be done FOR SCIENCE!! (It annoys me that most of the evidence we have about spoilers comes from laboratory studies or anecdotal evidence, even though it’s possible to do large-scale real-world experiments to answer the same questions.)
I have absolutely no qualms with Cerberus syndrome.
To be honest, I’d envisioned it working more by taking the Rule of Cool to unprecedented extremes than humor.
What about ‘crowdsourcing’ the writing? Create a master plotline, then have an MoR expert fill in those parts, a Ben 10 expert write those, etc. Then have someone edit it for consistent voice or something. Of course, that’s more of a group than a crowd, but whatever. It would simplify things, as I don’t feel smart enough to write Harry James Potter-Evans-Verres correctly.
But seriously, is anyone interested in collaborating on this?
Something like Gurren Lagann or Advent Children, then? Yeah, that’d work too. Except that in that case it probably wouldn’t be best to end it with Third Impact, but now I’m getting ahead of myself.
I was thinking of crowdsourcing more along these lines: Someone outlines what’s going to happen in the next few chapters. Someone else says ‘that makes no sense; character A is acting way OOC.’ Yet another person says, “Faction X wouldn’t make that move, it’s suicidal!!!” Another one says “Faction Y wouldn’t think of that move based on the information they have available.” And yet another says, “Faction Z won’t keep quiet about this, they need to move now!” And one more says, “By rule of cool, event Q needs to happen NOW!!” Someone else says, “Also, event P makes no sense given the rules of this universe, it needs to be axed.”
And after about a week of such squabbling, we’ve arrived at a coherent plot in which every character and faction acts in their best interests, based on the knowledge available to them and in accordance with their modus operandi and their competence. So someone writes that up while we move on to arguing about the next chapter.
This seems to me the simplest way of writing a fridge logic-free massively multiplayer crossover in which thirty xanatos pileups are inevitable.
I’ll tap out of this discussion for a while now, waiting to see what other people say.
Well it looks like we’re pretty much on the same page then. I’ll go assemble a team of the best fanfic writers I can find. PM me if you’re interested.
Maybe. Make it wiki-style or a publicly editable Google doc (is that possible?) and I’m probably in.
Any idea what became of this? Lleu hasn’t posted on LW since this thread.