How do you make an evil character likeable?
Table of Contents
How do you make an evil character likeable?
Six Ways to Make Your Villain Likable
- Make Them Cool and Competent. It’s hard to hate a villain with style.
- Help Your Audience Understand Them.
- Bestow Them With Moral Strengths.
- Create a Tragic Backstory.
- Give Them Justifiable Motivation.
- Make Them an Underdog.
What is it called when the bad guy is the main character?
antagonist
An antagonist is a character in a story who is presented as the chief foe of the protagonist.
How do you make a sympathetic villain?
Play around with your villain for a while, treating them as though they were your hero. Discern their emotions, motivations, and good intentions. Give them at least one supporting character to reinforce the reader’s ability to connect on an emotional level (see Frodo’s sympathy for Gollum.)
How do you make a character instantly likable?
10 Methods to Make Your Character Likeable
- Pet the Dog/Save the Cat. This method might be the most well-known.
- Intriguing Backstory. I love character backstories.
- Understanding. That last one leads me to another point.
- Cool Factor.
- Vulnerability.
- Give them Worthy Goals.
- Let them Grow.
- Humor.
How do you write a likable character?
A likable character is one that a reader cares about. So the character must care about something. When that aspect of caring is brought out, the character seems more human. Instead of spending a lot of time explaining what they care about or what motivates them, put them in a scene where they are doing what they love.
How do you make a character like you immediately?
Here are 10 methods to accomplish that. This method might be the most well-known. In movies, it’s used to get the viewers to like the protagonist immediately. Show your character doing something kindhearted for someone else–petting a dog or saving a cat out of a tree–to make them likeable.
How do you make your characters feel emotional?
Probably more than the average writer. Give your character a tragic or interesting one and it goes a long way to making an emotional connection. Look at Snape in Harry Potter. Everyone hated him through almost the entire series. Then, once we got his full backstory, people started saying he’s one of the best written characters of our time.
What builds credibility in a character?
Nothing builds credibility better than a character who knows something. Dirt biker, zooming down a mountain, mud flying with a kerchief over their mouth and taking air. Someone who does something is always more likable than someone who sits and thinks or worse, whines.