Worldbuilding: Difference between revisions

From 2d4chan
Jump to navigation Jump to search
1d4chan>A Walrus
Created page with "'''Worldbuilding''' is the process of creating fictional worlds for books, games, tv show and similar. It includes the big stuff, such as maps, planets, nations, civilizations..."
 
1d4chan>The Hat That Was
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Stub}}
'''Worldbuilding''' is the process of creating fictional worlds for books, games, tv show and similar. It includes the big stuff, such as maps, planets, nations, civilizations, gods and heroes and subtle things such as architecture, costumes and what people eat.  
'''Worldbuilding''' is the process of creating fictional worlds for books, games, tv show and similar. It includes the big stuff, such as maps, planets, nations, civilizations, gods and heroes and subtle things such as architecture, costumes and what people eat.  


Line 4: Line 5:
For speculative fiction, worldbuilding is generally an important part of what makes them work. Never the less it is only one part of what's required to make an good story. There is a reason why The Lord of the Rings (an actual story about people caught up in events involving elves, orcs, rings, a dark lord, etc) has outsold the Silmarillion (a History of Arda).  
For speculative fiction, worldbuilding is generally an important part of what makes them work. Never the less it is only one part of what's required to make an good story. There is a reason why The Lord of the Rings (an actual story about people caught up in events involving elves, orcs, rings, a dark lord, etc) has outsold the Silmarillion (a History of Arda).  


See also [[Fluff]]
*See also [[Fluff]]
{Stub}
 
[[Category:Gamer Slang]]

Revision as of 11:30, 4 October 2018

This article is a stub. You can help 1d4chan by expanding it

Worldbuilding is the process of creating fictional worlds for books, games, tv show and similar. It includes the big stuff, such as maps, planets, nations, civilizations, gods and heroes and subtle things such as architecture, costumes and what people eat.

Note

For speculative fiction, worldbuilding is generally an important part of what makes them work. Never the less it is only one part of what's required to make an good story. There is a reason why The Lord of the Rings (an actual story about people caught up in events involving elves, orcs, rings, a dark lord, etc) has outsold the Silmarillion (a History of Arda).