#writing generator
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mageofquandrix · 4 months ago
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Giant Trope Wheel + Giant List
I combed the internet and my own brain for tropes, and made a giant wheel (and list!) for your writing convenience.
Things to know:
-Some are 18+ or have mature themes. Spin at your own risk. -They skew towards romance but aren't exclusively romance -Feel free to share, I don't need attribution -if you use this to make AI "write" you something, I curse your bloodline. -if you find it helpful and let me know, I'll be pleased as punch and might leave you a comment.
Please send me tropes/smut tropes if they're not on here (or just send me your favorites, and I'll see if they're on here.) I may make a separate smut trope wheel at some point.
THE WHEEL
THE LIST
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intothestacks · 1 year ago
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Comic by Tom Gauld
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assorted-beany · 3 months ago
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I hate generative AI. I hate it not only because it makes the efforts of artists, writers, and translators harder for people to value and appreciate, but also because it's being incorporated into everything. Every electronic that can support it, every job it can be incorporated into, everything. It's already being used to filter applications and it's doing a shit job. It's used to generate movies and they suck. Even the ones used to make characters talk/sing are crackly and low quality compared to voice actors. And the very worst part in my opinion? Entire generations of children don't know how or want to put in the effort to develop new skills, the moment they hit that wall of not knowing/being bad at it is the moment they give up and use AI instead of actually researching and paying attention to how those skills are developed and applied. Being bad at something is the start for every skill and they refuse to face that. It's disheartening. Building a new skill or mindset is never easy and that's good. It's how you grow as a person and appreciate the efforts of others around you. You become better at something when you struggle with it and even if you don't? You learn something new about yourself and the people who are good at those things, people who spent so much time and effort developing those skills, become inspiration/aspiration. They become people who are worth admiring. The easy way out by using AI taints that. It takes from the fun and the whimsy and the pain when something you thought would be great turns out bad. To me AI is a dismissal of great effort and growth. I won't even go into how its theft for the sake of my own mental health. I hate generative AI, and for good reason.
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elexuscal · 1 month ago
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"what did students do before chatgpt?" well one time i forgot i had a history essay due at my 10am class the morning of so over the course of my 30 minute bus ride to school i awkwardly used by backpack as a desk, sped wrote the essay, and got an A on it.
six months later i re-read the essay prior to the final exam, went 'ohhhh yeah i remember this', got a question on that topic, and aced it.
point being that actually doing the work is how you learn the material and internalize it. ChatGPT can give you a short cut but it won't build you the the muscles.
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holmesandtheroman · 2 months ago
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NOTICE: As more and more fanfic writers are using generative AI for their works (you uncreative dweebs), I hereby swear on everything I hold dear that I have not and will NEVER use generative AI in ANY of my written work. Everything I post will be organically and creatively my own.
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thefearofcod · 11 months ago
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man if I gotta make bad art, it should at least be easy! But it’s not! It is also hard to make this bad art
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fipindustries · 1 year ago
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I cannot stand the parodies of modern major general, they're overdone and simply not as good as the original. They've done them about everything, whatever topic, big or small.
And when i notice one of them my eyes will always start to roll.
The diction's always slurry when they rush the complicated words, and adding many fricatives will turn it so cacophonous. The slanted rhymes are silly and they keep just making more and more, please someone stop the parodies of modern major general.
The scanning of the lyrics in the meter is unbearable, they emphazise the syllables in ways that are untenable, in short in matters musical, prosodic and ephemeral, i cannot stand the parodies of modern major general!
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rubyjones · 6 months ago
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Too many writers are using generative 'AI' to make their book covers, so I've written a guide on how to make your own cover for free or cheap without turning to a machine.
If you can't afford to pay an artist, you CAN make your own!
I hope this is a helpful overview that covers the basics and points to some free resources.
[Edit:] this is getting well outside this account's usual reach and a few people in the notes are making not so great comments about the fact I write weird erotica. So, for full disclosure: yes, I am an erotica writer. And the book covers include those for tentacle erotica and robot erotic romance. But you cannot see anything NSFW. All of these covers were approved by Amazon. Frankly, the cover of the most NSFW story, Oviposition, is downright tame! And to those complaining about the word 'Oviposition', that is a scientific word for a naturally occurring phenomenon - it's only naughty if you know the content of the story, which is only alluded to as 'sexy'.
I also do not believe that shirtless men require a warning, but yeah, two of the covers have shirtless men. The cover with a tasteful nude drawing (showing a bum, but not a weenor) has already been censored.
I can't do anything about the version of this post that got rb'd by a popular person, but for those who are concerned, consider this your content warning.
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clinical-space-podcast · 22 days ago
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Reblog if your art project has not, does not, and never will make use of generative ai at any point in your creative process.
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frownyalfred · 4 months ago
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Okay, another little lesson for fic writers since I see it come up sometimes in fics: wine in restaurants.
When you buy a bottle of wine in a (nicer) restaurant, generally (please note my emphasis there, this is a generalization for most restaurants, but not all restaurants, especially non-US ones) you may see a waiter do a few things when they bring you the bottle.
The waiter presents the bottle to the person who ordered it
The waiter uncorks the bottle in order to serve it
The waiter hands the cork to the person who ordered the bottle
The waiter pours a small portion of the wine (barely a splash) and waits for the person who ordered it to taste it
The waiter then pours glasses for everyone else at the table, and then returns to fill up the initial taster's glass
Now, you might be thinking -- that's all pretty obvious, right? They're bringing you what you ordered, making sure you liked it, and then pouring it for the group. Wrong. It's actually a little bit more complicated than that.
The waiter presents the bottle to the person who ordered it so that they can inspect the label and vintage and make sure it's the bottle they actually ordered off the menu
The waiter uncorks the bottle so that the table can see it was unopened before this moment (i.e., not another wine they poured into an empty bottle) and well-sealed
The waiter hands the cork to the person who ordered the bottle so that they can inspect the label on the cork and determine if it matches up; they can also smell/feel the cork to see if there is any dergradation or mold that might impact the wine itself
The waiter pours a small portion for the person who ordered to taste NOT to see if they liked it -- that's a common misconception. Yes, sometimes when house wine is served by the glass, waiters will pour a portion for people to taste and agree to. But when you order a bottle, the taste isn't for approval -- you've already bought the bottle at this point! You don't get to refuse it if you don't like it. Rather, the tasting is to determine if the wine is "corked", a term that refers to when a wine is contaminated by TCA, a chemical compound that causes a specific taste/flavor. TCA can be caused by mold in corks, and is one of the only reasons you can (generally) refuse a bottle of wine you have already purchased. Most people can taste or smell TCA if they are trained for it; other people might drink the wine for a few minutes before noticing a damp, basement-like smell on the aftertaste. Once you've tasted it, you'll remember it. That first sip is your opportunity to take one for the table and save them from a possibly corked bottle of wine, which is absolutely no fun.
If you've sipped the wine (I generally smell it, I've found it's easier to smell than taste) and determined that it is safe, you then nod to your waiter. The waiter will then pour glasses for everyone else at the table. If the wine is corked, you would refuse the bottle and ask the waiter for a new bottle. If there is no new bottle, you'll either get a refund or they'll ask you to choose another option on their wine list. A good restaurant will understand that corked bottles happen randomly, and will leap at the opportunity to replace it; a bad restaurant or a restaurant with poor training will sometimes try to argue with you about whether or not it's corked. Again, it can be a subtle, subjective taste, so proceed carefully.
In restaurants, this process can happen very quickly! It's elegant and practiced. The waiter will generally uncork the bottle without setting the bottle down or bracing it against themselves. They will remove the cork without breaking it, and they will pour the wine without dripping it down the label or on the table.
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frankierotwinkdeath · 1 year ago
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Y’all want Taylor Swift to be gay so bad but you won’t even write femslash about her
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verocitea · 3 months ago
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Soul Eater AU my beloved
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incognitopolls · 3 months ago
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This poll is asking about voluntary use of generative AI. For the purposes of this poll, do not count instances where you were required to use generative AI (e.g. for a school assignment, job required it, etc).
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
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animentality · 3 months ago
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toooceanblue · 15 days ago
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Thinking about how in Gideon's narration she employs 206 anatomical names for bones but Harrow doesn't know the difference between a hilt and a pommel. Something something cavaliers being expected to respect/understand/integrate into necromancy while necromancers are not expected to do the same for caveliership. Is this anything.
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