Fanfic meme
Jan. 17th, 2010 06:08 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Your result for The Fan Fiction Personality Test...
The Mindgamer
Everything is possible, nothing is ever really over.
Fanfiction is a creative outlet for you. You don't intentionally write it, it just happens. You find inspiration in several fandoms, but are not obsessed with only one.
You like to explore "what if" situations. What if this character had never made this very choice? What if this event had taken place sooner, never, elsewhere? What if these people had never met?
You are likely to write Alternative Universes, fan seasons or sequels and just follow your (sometimes pretty strange) plot bunnies.
Take The Fan Fiction Personality Test at OkCupid
Your Analysis (Vertical line = Average)
You scored 57% on Slasher, higher than 52% of your peers.
You scored 77% on Weirdo, higher than 92% of your peers.
You scored 79% on TrueFan, higher than 82% of your peers.
You scored 87% on Mindgamer, higher than 96% of your peers.
You scored 69% on BarelyFF, higher than 85% of your peers.
You scored 32% on Immature, higher than 17% of your peers.
Sounds about right. It's near impossible for me to sit down and say, "Today I shall write fic". The story either comes to me in its entirety or it doesn't get off the ground, and no coaxing, pleading or haranguing makes a jot of difference. That's why I wrote 2 one-shots and 2 ficlets in 2008, nothing in 2009, and after weeks of staring at challenges I finally responded to one last week.
My plot-bunnies are definitely strange. In my three (count-em) one-shots so far, two are set in an Afterlife with a robust public transportation system, and one compares a former FBI-dude to a duck.
Not sure if fan seasons are my thing. I haven't yet read one that completely satisfied me. But I like AUs that spring from canon (not all-human AUs) but veer off in an entirely different direction.