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Keys to a Successful Multi-Author Universe

JoeBobMack 🚫

It appears that The Swarm Cycle and Naked in School are the two universes with the most stories on SOL. I notice that both start with very easily understood premises and a "hook," although neither is completely fleshed out when introduced.

As far as I can tell, NIS was started by a single story that gave only the barest of justifications for a pretty outlandish premise - a few students each week required to attend all school events naked and submit to "reasonable" requests. The idea was bizarre enough that it took me a while to try some of them, but Don Lockwood's stories, in particular, showed the possibilities.

The Swarm Cycle had a bit more structure, but not much in it's introduction. The Sa'arm attacking, the alien race seeking warriors since they are too pacifisitic to kill, and the CAP selection process, pickups, and concubine alotments. This universe got more guidance from its creator, Thinking Horndog, and, as I understand it from the outside, a group of authors that gathered and helped maintain some structure. There, also, the stories range widely, but there have been some that have done "universe building" and others that have explored very human relationships in this bizarre context.

For each of these universes, however, there was a very simple premise and a hook - naked in school and pickups.

Are those the keys to universes that attract a wide range of authors taking a shot? I'm just curious. The similarities in these two popular universes struck me.

Replies:   Reluctant_Sir
Reluctant_Sir 🚫
Updated:

@JoeBobMack

The Swarm cycle DOES have an active author group (and the creator, of course) that guides any new stories to maintain canon, but that isn't why I chose to write for it.

The only reason I got involved at all, was that I enjoyed the first story I read of the series and it fired up my imagination.

The NIS series didn't. The first story I read was not the initial story in the universe, I admit, but the story didn't get the creative juices flowing so I haven't written in that universe.

Keep in mind that writing in someone else's universe can be both easier and harder than writing your own story!

Easier in that you have a set of guidelines to follow, a lot of the groundwork is already laid. You just have to fit your characters into that framework and within the lines drawn.

Harder in that you have to fit your characters into that framework and within the lines drawn. As any writer here could probably tell you, sometimes characters do the damndest things and having artificially imposed lines can be very limiting.

Anyway, just my $0.02. I am sure the experts will be along to tell you all about it soon enough!

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫
Updated:

@Reluctant_Sir

Harder in that you have to fit your characters into that framework and within the lines drawn.

I agree and that is probably the main reason I don't dabble in other people's universes.

In my opinion, there are four general types of authors, who typically use both, none, or one of two approaches in a story. The first approach is a standardized plot with only minor variations in the plotline. The second approach is a standardized character with only minor personality differences.

If an author's standardized plots or characters don't fit the universe's guidelines, then the story could be awkward.

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