Flat vs Round Characters: Both Are Valid - When Archetypes Serve the Story

    The writing advice is nearly universal: “Make your characters three-dimensional! Give them depth! Show their complexity!” And then you look at some of the most beloved stories ever told—fairy tales, myths, adventure films, genre fiction—and realize: many of their characters are flat as paper. And it works perfectly. James Bond doesn’t have a meaningful character arc across most films. Indiana Jones is the same person at the end as at the beginning. Sherlock Holmes remains fundamentally unchanged across decades of stories. ...

    February 5, 2025 · 11 min · Rafiul Alam

    The Unsympathetic Protagonist Problem: Making Unlikeable Characters Compelling

    Walter White cooks meth and poisons a child. Amy Dunne frames her husband for murder with sociopathic precision. Jordan Belfort defrauds thousands and revels in his own depravity. And we can’t stop watching. This is the paradox of the unsympathetic protagonist: characters who violate our moral codes yet remain narratively compelling. They shouldn’t work—but in the right hands, they become cultural phenomena. The question isn’t whether you should write unlikeable protagonists. It’s how to make them watchable without sacrificing moral complexity. ...

    February 4, 2025 · 11 min · Rafiul Alam

    Competence Porn: Why We Love Watching Experts - The Appeal of Skill

    There’s a specific kind of dopamine hit that comes from watching someone who is exceptionally good at something solve a problem with elegant precision. Sherlock Holmes deducing a person’s entire backstory from their shoelaces. Tony Stark building a suit in a cave with a box of scraps. Elle Woods demolishing a witness with perfect legal maneuvering. Dr. House diagnosing the impossible case through sheer diagnostic brilliance. This is competence porn—and it’s one of the most satisfying character types in storytelling. ...

    February 3, 2025 · 9 min · Rafiul Alam

    Want vs Need: The Character's Blind Spot - Why Goals and Growth Differ

    Your character walks into the story chasing the wrong thing. They’re convinced that if they just get the promotion, win the competition, or reach the destination, everything will be fixed. They’re pursuing their Want with laser focus. And the entire story is about why they’re wrong. Because what they Want is not what they Need—and that gap is where character transformation lives. The Want vs Need Framework This is one of the most powerful tools in character development: ...

    February 2, 2025 · 9 min · Rafiul Alam

    The Lie Your Character Believes: Internal Conflict as Story Engine

    Every compelling character is haunted by a belief that isn’t true. Not a minor misconception. Not a small error in judgment. A fundamental lie about themselves or the world that shapes every decision they make—until the story forces them to confront it. This lie is the engine of character transformation. And understanding how to craft it separates functional characters from unforgettable ones. What Is the Character’s Lie? The Lie is a false belief your character holds about themselves, others, or how the world works. It’s: ...

    February 1, 2025 · 7 min · Rafiul Alam