What's the story behind this collection?
Posts by Another Humanity
Underrated parenting advice.
New collection?
New way: Naming your fiction category
- Focused storytelling that hits reader desires
- Targeted marketing that builds loyal fans
- Readers come to you for exactly what they want
Old way: Writing without a clear category
- Random storytelling without audience in mind
- Marketing guesswork and scattershot promotions
- Readers unsure what to expect
Old way: Writing without a clear category
New way: Naming your fiction category
👇
You told me about RE 0, which other episode did you find hard to finish?
What I'll say may sound too simplistic: Do you think RE7 and 8 were a reaction to P.T.?
You seem to have a clear idea of how 7 could have been if it evolved from 6.
So, RE6 is both a soft reboot and a potential of what the series could have been moving forward?
If feels like you feel great posting about this.
Do you think the perception shift started with RE 4, 5 or 6?
Spacing + Positioning + Resource Management?
The shallow pool being RE 7 & 8?
By the way, what's your insight on RE6?
Is it a logical follow-up to 5 with the co-op campaigns?
16 mysteries.
4 detectives.
When threads appear at crime scenes around the city 4 investigators realize they're not hunting a killer.
Someone has been patient.
Agatha Christie meets H.P. Lovecraft in this horror-mystery anthology where every clue hides in plain sight.
#HorrorMystery #ComingSoon
3 reasons naming your fiction category matters:
- It defines your audience—know who you’re writing for.
- It shapes your book’s marketing and visibility.
- It positions your work among similar stories readers trust.
Know your category, and you build affinity that sells.
What every new fiction writer should do:
Choose a clear genre or category
Understand the expectations of that category
Write stories that fulfill those expectations
Market directly to that category’s audience
When you do this, your message lands and your readers find you.
The biggest mistake new fiction writers make is not naming their category clearly.
Without a clear category, you’re writing without an audience—no one knows who you’re for or why they should care.
Define your space, claim your readers, and build your tribe.
It sounds like it would be more fluid as a 2 player game.
DS3 feels like there's no innovation.
There is some in DS2, but not enough to justify recommending it to someone new.
Elden Ring, I'm not sure.
I think we'll need another 5 years to dissect it.
I'm at:
- 3 Characters DeS
- 30 Characters DS1
- 12 Characters DS2
- 10 Characters DS3
- 8 Characters ER
But I can only recommend Demon's Souls and Dark Souls 1.
I should probably do a top 12 moments of the series.
How would you make RE0 more manageable to finish?
It is probably true.
DS 2, 3 and Elden Ring will be too big and not innovative enough to be recommended.
Ever thought about trying Dark Souls 1?
It feels like you have a lot of great memories from these games.
What's your insight on environmental narration in the series from Demon's Souls to Elden Ring?
Puzzles: RE1/RE2 > RE0 > RE3 > RE4 > RE5 ?
I'll try that today.
I always play in the highest difficulty mode to test the game as intended.
Ever played Demon's Souls?
How do you classify them in terms of Puzzles?
What are your top 10 RPGs, all categories?
What are your top 5 Survival Horror Games vs. Action Horror Games?