• OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    It would probably work better as a comedy series, but I’d love to read or watch a story about a group of three conspiracy-believing idiots who manage to sneak aboard a scientific ship headed to antartica to try and prove that the earth is flat. However, disaster strikes and the ship sinks just off the coast, only for the three idiots and one scientist to survive. They have to band together to survive the aric, and end up losing their way… and discover that the world is actually flat when they run into a giant wall of ice that extends farther up than anything could exsist and just never ends.

    The main character is actually the scientist who is grappling with the idea that these three idiots he has to deal with are actually right, and he’s fallen for the round earth propaganda. Maybe they run into the actual scientists who help maintain the lie that the earth is flat. I dunno.

    But I like the idea of it.

  • Linuto@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Life on a planet, either future earth or maybe stranded on another, where only the regions between night and day are habitable. All life needs to constantly move to be in a region of dawn or dusk. Some places near the poles could have semi-permanent civilizations that don’t need to move as often.

    • finestnothing@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I think you’d like The Sunlit Man by Brandon Sanderson! Came out a month or so ago, definitely worth the read. The setting is a planet where the sun/sunlight kills, literally hot enough to melt the rock of the planet as it goes. Very good book imo

    • MrFunnyMoustache@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      I’m imagining so many diverse civilisations… Some living in the poles, with rotating walls and mirrors to control the heat. Some civilisations living underground. Some are nomads, moving constantly (would work really well for small planets with a very long day). Some civilisations live near volcanos and use geothermal heating to survive the long nights, and hibernating in deep caves in the day.

      Later when nuclear energy and heatpumps are invented/discovered, more of the planet becomes inhabitable, with extremely fast underground trains to facilitate travel.

    • Æther@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      This is the most recent world in Thresholder, if you’d like to read an excellent fic that fleshes out that idea well

  • unmagical@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    Alien landing site is discovered by a liberal university student who’s barely passing. This adds to their already crippling stress as they try to navigate the world with an alien companion and have to figure out a way to get them off world before the alien becomes a political or scientific captive.

    Comedy as we watch everything go wrong to this person pushed way out of their league and past their breaking point.

  • Globulart@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    With all the oversaturation of superhero content I’m surprised I haven’t seen anything where all superhero abilities are lost at puberty (and still only rarely seen before that).

    I can see a lot of mileage in a setting where some people are castrated to try and retain powers (maybe this works partly and dulls your power), where non superheros are exploiting children and their powers, seems like there’s a good amount of potential narrative in there which I’m way too lazy to come up with myself.

      • Globulart@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        I’ve only read northern lights once and didn’t continue with the series so I’ve either forgotten what an alethiometer is or never got to it.

        From memory your daemon can be any creature it wants till you hit puberty though, so a bit like that I guess yeah.

        It’s basically just the reverse of xmen I suppose, just seems like an interesting concept to explore and I’m surprised I’ve not seen it done (maybe it has, I’m no tv/comic expert).

  • megane-kun@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    This is mainly for my own self-indulgence, but I’ve long fancied writing an “isekai” story about someone who found himself in a “typical isekai” setting but with a twist.

    ::: The story. The last paragraph of the spoiler describes the twist ending.

    The story starts out with him being in a remote community next to a forested mountain (this would become important later). Our protagonist would make his way into bigger and bigger settlements until he comes across some rather important people who were in fact looking for him. After some other developments, in which he becomes conscious of his “powers,” he decides to go to the people looking for him—or rather, their boss, the emperor of a neighboring empire.

    However, before he makes his way to the empire’s capital, he’s abducted by a rebel group. This rebel group gives him a rundown of why the empire is looking for him: that he’s the subject of a prophecy which is the very foundation of that empire and its eventual downfall.

    It turns out, the empire is acting to fulfill the prophecy that will put the end to their empire, and willingly so. According to the prophecy, our protagonist will put the end to the empire, and all sentient life in the world, through a process of “ascension” (imagine an isekai version of the human instrumentality project, I suppose, but with way less magitek and more hand-waving). This rebel group wants none of that, however, and presents their case to our protagonist.

    When asked about it, the rebels reveal that neither the empire nor the rebels know how this “ascension process” will occur, but both have faith that this is fated to occur, and that the protagonist appearing is a sign of that. The protagonist wants some time to think about it, and more importantly, some time to just take in all the events thus far. The rebels understand, and give the protagonist some time.

    The empire, however, has discovered that the protagonist is in the rebel base, and had attacked. In order to spare the rebels from being destroyed, the protagonist escaped from the rebels (he’s still technically their prisoner), and went along with the empire’s troops.

    Our protagonist was presented to the emperor, not as a prisoner, but as a guest of honor. Talking to our protagonist in private, the emperor presented the empire’s case: they’re acting on the prophecy, not because they’re bound to it, but because they want to. The emperor also told our protagonist the truth of his existence in this world: he is this world’s creator, literally their God. Everything that happens in this world is because he willed it to happen. This is his power all along: whatever he imagined, the world manifests.

    Well, this is a shock to our protagonist, who asked for some time to think about the implications of everything he’s found out so far. For all his powers as god of this world, however, our protagonist can’t will it that he knows why he’s the god of this world. This god, our protagonist, has no power over himself in this world.

    The rebel group, after having been scattered after their base is dismantled, launched a desperate attempt to secure our protagonist. They were rendered helpless facing the empire’s elites, but our protagonist asked the emperor to give them an audience (with the emperor) as well.

    In this meeting, the representatives of the empire on one side, headed by the emperor himself; the representatives of the rebels on the other, gave their arguments to our protagonist at first, which devolved to a shouting match between the two sides. Our protagonist started dissociating, and found himself lying inside a tent, in the middle of a forested mountain, in what is presumably the real world.

    This real-life version of our protagonist is not feeling very well, however. He can barely open his eyes. He’s incredibly tired, and more importantly, suffocating to death.

    That’s the twist, unfortunately. This "isekai world"‌is his dying dream. This is why I think this is just my self-indulgence. It’s a very formulaic “dark twist” on a cliché.

  • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    OP guy (centuries old but looks 25, good looking) lives out near the forest, almost at the edge of civilisation. He has built a small house, farms, and because his powers so incredible (give him the most OP of them all; telekinesis, telepathy, understanding of languages and concepts, unlimited mana and skill to manipulate it etc), he lives in harmony with nature.

    One day, he visits the nearby town, and picks up a ragged orphan girl who was being beaten in an alley (don’t ask me how, that’s up to the writer). This is the story of the OP man seeing his “daughter” cross the stages of life he had forgotten about with age, come of age, go through education etc.

    If possible, I’d like some comedy and some romance on the side for OP too. Thanks!

  • Rocky60@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    A virus has rendered the population of the earth sterile. No new births. Extinction of the human race is inevitable. How would that play out? Absolute lawlessness? No more wars?

  • init@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I wrote a lot of star wars fanfic back 20 years ago because I was terrible at writing and couldn’t afford college classes for a few semesters. I needed the practice, and the best way at the time for me to exercise that skill was forcing myself into creative writing. Those chapters and the idea of how the story would end were never finished.

    In 2020, I started a DnD campaign based off those chapters, and we are still playing the same campaign. When we began, I thought I had maybe two, or maximum three years of content. Now at three years later, we are optimistically at bout 1/3 of the way through the story playing at roughly every other week.

    If I had one wish, it would be to have three hours to sell the idea to Jon Favreau, because he would make it the next Star Wars saga. I’ve taken elements from KOTOR1, The Witcher, The Expanse, and most of the new star wars shows to create a story where my players are battling for what they believe is right, when there are no right answers.

    I’ve been lying to my players for about three years. They believe they are bringing peace and prosperity to a shattered Republic by fighting on the side of the rebels about 1000 BBY. What they do not know is that they’ve been manipulated and windwashed by a sith lord into decapitating the Jedi order and acting as the admirals and generals of the rebel fleet and army.

    I have been planning this for ages. All the names of recurring characters are anagrams for things like “Revan was right”, “peace is a lie”, and “sith lord doom”, and in one part of the story, a player is actually playing his same character without knowing it, and his “new” character’s name is an anagram of his original character’s name.

    There will come a point where he will find out he was manipulated by the story, and the other players will find out I did not tell them the whole truth of their own situation. It is going to be glorious. The party will find out they are all essentially Sith apprentices with no easy way out. And then we will get to the actual subject of the story–what it means to be a Jedi. What do you do, when everything you believed in and believed was right turns out to be a lie?

    When faced with losing everything, like Obiwan Kenobi, how do you continue serving the light when it has robbed everything from you?

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    Basically my life. I’m going to have to publish it as fiction though because nobody will believe it (except possibly Stephen King, whom I suspect has also published real events under the heading of fiction).

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Long time ago, I did a version of Don Quixote reimagined as a Star Wars superfan. Riding a white motorcycle with an X-Wing helmet, he travels from his home in Mantua, New Jersey to Atlantic City for a Star Wars convention. Along the way, he meets a manager of a hotel who is a little person and he mistakes for Yoda, camping out by the icemaker to prove he’s ready to be given the rank of Jedi Knight, he takes on a Padawan stoner who follows on a moped, and tilts at windmills imagining them to be TIE fighters and AT-STs.

    The thing writes itself, but the problem was that Don Quixote is really long and meandering.

  • indepndnt@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    When I was a kid I had this idea about a protagonist who’s a serial killer but kills bad people. I think I even wrote a chapter or so, but it was probably shit. Then later someone wrote Dexter, so I don’t need to worry about it any more.

    Edit: it was Jeff Lindsay, the first book was in 2004. It was probably the mid-90s when I was having those ideas so we might’ve been thinking about it at the same time lol