I'm laughing because I'm writing a story that centers around one person, but she's hardly the uber-awesomest of her little group, and as the series goes on (at least as I plan it), she loves other people playing in her sandbox. What can I say, the girl is personable and since she's far from the most powerful, she has to depend on other people.
It does make managing the cast effing difficult, but my protag is far more sociable than I am, so it's actually kind of fun to balance her little group.
For the princesses, I think part of it is that they're all from different stories and different times, so maybe they really don't see each other, because then we'd have a dimensional paradox and chaos would ensue. :)
But hard to say the same for the urban fantasy heroes and heroines, and maybe Avengers addressed that in its own way: Bringing a bunch of Type As into one group is damn hard, and that's why none of them are looking at each other in the poster.
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Date: 2012-07-06 02:14 am (UTC)I'm laughing because I'm writing a story that centers around one person, but she's hardly the uber-awesomest of her little group, and as the series goes on (at least as I plan it), she loves other people playing in her sandbox. What can I say, the girl is personable and since she's far from the most powerful, she has to depend on other people.
It does make managing the cast effing difficult, but my protag is far more sociable than I am, so it's actually kind of fun to balance her little group.
For the princesses, I think part of it is that they're all from different stories and different times, so maybe they really don't see each other, because then we'd have a dimensional paradox and chaos would ensue. :)
But hard to say the same for the urban fantasy heroes and heroines, and maybe Avengers addressed that in its own way: Bringing a bunch of Type As into one group is damn hard, and that's why none of them are looking at each other in the poster.