by Clavicle » Fri Dec 27, 2013 9:15 am
@chateau your first example is exactly what I was thinking of when asking this question, which means it's become standard now. Oof. [A+ for turning that disaster of an ocular descriptor into something readable tho!] I agree with less is better. Not to the point where all I can picture is a stock "Mary Jane" character with blonde hair and blue eyes, but I give more props to writers who manage to describe their characters without heaping up tons and tons of [cliched, wordy, difficult, etc.] descriptors on top. And, yeah, it makes me wonder how observant these people are, to notice details like that in others, lel.
@west, YES. Someone said it. I love it when people do some character development within the RP! Like in actual books, eheh. While we're on the topic of simple keyword descriptors, though, what I really love is when writers describe their character in a way that relates to the character's life/personality [or outright talks about it], and essentially makes them more than just a stock character. I'm now somewhat interested in the character in your example because of the T-shirts and bracelets [I think you meant *humorous!] but otherwise I would have completely glossed over his appearance because it's one I've seen a lot in other characters. His shirts are fun, so he's gotta be a fun guy, right? Or maybe he likes offensive humor, which gives us more insight into his personality. Similarly, a character with bad teeth might smoke, or just have bad personal hygiene. You know, writers who actually manage to show with their details, without burdening us with stuff like "her orbs were shimmering pools of molten red".
That got a bit wordy sorry, ahaha;;