test/skills/storyboard-manager/references/character_development.md
2026-03-24 04:04:58 +00:00

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Character Development Reference

This reference provides frameworks for creating compelling, multi-dimensional characters.

Core Character Elements

Basic Profile

  • Name: Full name, nicknames, name meaning
  • Age: Chronological and how they present
  • Physical Description: Distinguishing features, style, mannerisms
  • Role: Protagonist, antagonist, supporting, mentor, etc.
  • Archetype: Hero, mentor, trickster, everyman, etc.

Personality Dimensions

  • Temperament: Sanguine, choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic
  • Traits: 3-5 defining characteristics (both positive and negative)
  • Quirks: Unique habits or behaviors
  • Speech Patterns: How they talk, vocabulary, accent
  • Sense of Humor: Type and style

Motivation & Goals

  • External Goal: What they're trying to achieve (plot-level)
  • Internal Goal: What they're trying to become (character arc)
  • Motivation: Why they want these things
  • Stakes: What happens if they fail
  • Misbelief/Lie: False belief holding them back

Character Backstory Framework

The Ghost (Past Wound)

  • Traumatic Event: What happened in their past
  • Age When It Occurred: How it shaped their development
  • Who Was Involved: Other characters connected to trauma
  • How It Changed Them: Before and after personality
  • Coping Mechanisms: How they deal with the wound

Formative Relationships

  • Family Dynamics: Parents, siblings, family structure
  • Key Friendships: Influences from peers
  • Romantic History: Past relationships and their impact
  • Mentors/Role Models: Who shaped their values
  • Enemies/Rivals: Antagonistic relationships that defined them

Life History

  • Childhood: Key events, family situation, early personality
  • Adolescence: Identity formation, major choices, first loves/losses
  • Young Adulthood: Independence, career/path choices, relationships
  • Current Situation: Where story finds them

Character Arc Types

Positive Change Arc

Structure:

  1. Lie they believe
  2. Want vs. Need established
  3. First glimpse of truth
  4. Rejection of truth (return to lie)
  5. Moment of truth (crisis)
  6. Choice to embrace truth
  7. New worldview demonstrated

Markers:

  • Start: Incomplete, held back by misbelief
  • Midpoint: Glimpse growth but not ready
  • Climax: Must choose between lie and truth
  • End: Transformed, living truth

Flat Arc

Structure:

  1. Truth known from beginning
  2. World believes lie
  3. Character tested on their truth
  4. Character demonstrates truth
  5. World begins to change
  6. Truth proven through action

Markers:

  • Start: Strong in beliefs
  • Midpoint: Severely tested
  • Climax: Greatest test of faith
  • End: Changed the world, not themselves

Negative Arc

Structure:

  1. Flaw/weakness established
  2. Temptation introduced
  3. Small compromises begin
  4. Point of no return crossed
  5. Descent accelerates
  6. Rejection of redemption
  7. Tragic conclusion

Markers:

  • Start: Flawed but sympathetic
  • Midpoint: Questionable choices
  • Climax: Beyond redemption
  • End: Destroyed or becomes villain

Relationship Dynamics

Character Relationships Matrix

For each significant relationship, define:

  • Dynamic Type: Mentor/student, rivals, allies, romance, family
  • Conflict Source: What creates tension
  • Common Ground: What bonds them
  • Influence: How they change each other
  • Arc: How relationship evolves

Protagonist-Antagonist Relationship

  • Opposition: How antagonist blocks protagonist's goal
  • Mirror/Foil: How they reflect/contrast each other
  • Personal Stakes: Why this matters beyond plot
  • Symmetry: Similar origins or opposite arc paths
  • Respect Level: Do they understand each other?

Character Voice Development

Dialogue Markers

  • Vocabulary Level: Formal, casual, slang, technical
  • Sentence Structure: Short and punchy vs. long and flowing
  • Favorite Words/Phrases: Repeated expressions
  • Topics They Discuss: What they talk about most
  • What They Avoid: Topics they don't address
  • Lying Tells: How they behave when dishonest

Internal Voice (POV Characters)

  • Thought Patterns: Analytical, emotional, scattered, focused
  • Biases: How they interpret events
  • Blind Spots: What they don't see about themselves
  • Metaphors: Types of comparisons they make
  • Narrative Distance: Close, intimate vs. distant, observational

Character Consistency

Behavioral Patterns

  • Under Stress: How they react to pressure
  • When Happy: How they express joy
  • When Angry: Explosive, cold, passive-aggressive
  • Decision-Making: Impulsive, analytical, avoidant
  • Trust: Quick or slow to trust others

Core Values

  • Non-Negotiables: Lines they won't cross
  • Flexible Areas: Where they compromise
  • Value Hierarchy: Ranking of priorities (family, honor, survival, etc.)
  • Values Testing: Scenes where values conflict

Growth Indicators

  • Early Story: How they handle situation type X
  • Mid Story: How handling of X begins to shift
  • Late Story: How they handle X after growth
  • Demonstration: Parallel scenes showing change

Character Roles in Ensemble

Ensemble Balance

  • The Leader: Drives action, makes decisions
  • The Heart: Emotional center, unifies group
  • The Brain: Strategy, knowledge, analysis
  • The Warrior: Action, protection, physical strength
  • The Wildcard: Unpredictable, challenges norms
  • The Conscience: Moral compass, voice of reason

Avoiding Character Redundancy

  • Different Wants: Each character pursuing different goals
  • Different Methods: Varied approaches to problems
  • Different Worldviews: Contrasting perspectives
  • Different Skills: Complementary abilities
  • Different Arcs: Each on unique journey

Character Development Questions

Surface Level

  • What do they look like?
  • How do they dress?
  • What's their job/role?
  • Where do they live?

Deeper Level

  • What do they fear most?
  • What do they desire more than anything?
  • What's their greatest secret?
  • What do they lie to themselves about?
  • What would they sacrifice everything for?

Behavioral Level

  • How do they treat people with less power?
  • What makes them laugh?
  • What makes them cry?
  • When do they lie, and why?
  • How do they handle failure?

Thematic Level

  • What do they represent in the story?
  • What question does their arc answer?
  • How do they embody or challenge the theme?
  • What truth do they discover?

Character Testing Scenarios

To ensure character depth, test them against:

  1. Moral Dilemma: Force choice between two values
  2. Loss: Take away something they depend on
  3. Temptation: Offer something they want vs. need
  4. Betrayal: Test their trust and forgiveness
  5. Sacrifice: Force them to give up something important
  6. Revelation: Expose a truth they've been avoiding
  7. Isolation: Remove their support system
  8. Power: Give them control and see how they use it

Red Flags for Weak Characters

Avoid:

  • Mary Sue/Gary Stu: Too perfect, no real flaws
  • Inconsistent Behavior: Acts differently for plot convenience
  • No Agency: Things happen to them, they don't drive action
  • Single-Note: Only one personality trait
  • No Growth: Same at end as beginning (unless flat arc)
  • Reactive Only: Never makes proactive choices
  • Exposition Puppet: Exists to explain things
  • Token Diversity: Defined only by identity marker

Fix By:

  • Adding meaningful flaws and consequences
  • Establishing behavioral patterns and motivations
  • Giving them goals and plans they actively pursue
  • Layering contradictory traits and complexity
  • Planning clear arc with transformation
  • Creating scenes where they initiate action
  • Giving them purpose beyond information delivery
  • Developing full personality, backstory, and individual arc