Postby Davidizer13 » Wed Jan 27, 2010 11:22 pm
I've tried doing both, and I prefer doing the plot and/or setting first, since I'm better at that than making characters. One story, I tried doing the characters first, and then moved onto the plot. Basically, I had an idea about the beginning and the ending, but couldn't get the two connected.
So now, in my newest project, I'm trying to do a plot first, and it's working a lot better. So far, I've got a world, but nobody to be a part of it, aside from a couple broad concepts.
My advice? Try both, and see which one you like the most, and which one gets you results. Make a world; describe it in detail. See what you can do with what you set up, and you'll be able to generate some potential plots. If it's speculative fiction (sci-fi, alternate history, fantasy, etc.) or even something like historical fiction, try to imagine what life would be like in the setting you make up.
Make some characters; think about their motivations, their backgrounds, personalities, etc. Think about how they would interact; what conflicts and differences would they have, and how could they resolve them? What would a conversation between you and them be like?
What will the setting do to them, and what will they do to the setting? No matter which path you pick, you'll get better at both.
One book that might be a big help to you is Making Comics by Scott McCloud. It's in comic book form, and it's a very entertaining read. Despite its name and format, though, it explains more than just art, drawing technique and formatting (though it does a great job of that). After all, comics/manga are a medium of telling a story, and building a setting and people to exist in it are universal to all storytelling.
We are loved even though we suck.
Psalms 37:37 (NHEB)
Mark the perfect man, and see the upright, for there is a future for the man of peace.