: Writing a supernatural book with characters who have supernatural powers that have already been explored in other works? I am in the process of writing a book with many of the characters discovering
I am in the process of writing a book with many of the characters discovering that they have supernatural powers.
I am trying very hard to find 'original' powers that have not yet been created and explored, however a lot of my ideas (which I thought were my own!) have already been explored in other works.
How can I write my book and have it published if the characters have powers which are similar to those in other books out there.
I am not copying anyone and want to put my own spin on this.
Shall I waste anymore time with this idea, or will I be sued for copying people?
Please help!
Thank you :)
More posts by @Phylliss352
: What are these parallel blocks of text called? What are these boxes of text called that interrupt the flow of text with some aside type comment? source They're usually related to the main
: Is this sentence grammatically correct? The sentence is "How calculating are you?". I am simply wondering if under standard conventions of the English language, that this sentence ought to be
2 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
You really can't avoid having the same magical powers as other people you aren't copying the characters from the millions of anime, movies, or comic books that have fire, sonic scream, or lighting as a super power otherwise all groups would be suing one another for that basic concept. It's how your characters use these powers, what situations you write for them to use these powers, and how they define the character that is were you will be different from anything made with whatever power you're looking at.
There is a reason why most writers choose simple powers instead of reinventing the wheel it's much faster to get into the story when you can pull an element or desired trait (like mental computer hacking) into the world and start the story rather then have to stop and take the time out to explain how characters eating bullets can allow them to alloy bend (similar to a book series that allows their mages to consume metals and based on a ton of minor details = they can do X amount of metal magic at X amount of damage) you can do the later but you want the easier route so the story not the powers is the core focus light magic systems are fine to use not everyone needs heavy or ungodly complex.
Remember, you are creating a character, not a faceless vessel for super powers.
There are multiple examples of similar superpowers in different universes. Even in the same universe we can have this example (like multiple Flashes, TV Trope warning). Compare Hulk and Abomination, for example - they have essentially the same power, but as characters, they are on the opposite sides of spectrum. All characters coming from Krypton are having similar superpowers - so what?
I can see a potential problem with plagiarism here. Or, even if you are careful about copyright, readers may say "Oh well, this is just another *** character." This is where your talent as a writer should help you. Rather than creating a carbon copy of a well-known character, you should do your best to create someone unique, someone who is not defined by the powers that he or she uses.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.