Guidelines and Pitfalls for Strong Fantasy Writing
Fantasy invites imagination, worldbuilding, and emotional depth. Whether you’re organizing a series of “fantasy files”—notes, world bibles, character dossiers—or drafting the next chapter, certain principles help turn scattered ideas into a cohesive, compelling story. This guide lays out practical do’s and don’ts for fantasy creators who want to build immersive worlds without getting lost in their own lore.
Start Smart: The Foundations Every Fantasy File Needs
Before diving into details, establish the essentials for your world. A strong foundation keeps your files usable and helps you avoid contradictions later.
- Do create a clear world overview: geography, major cultures, and the basic rules of magic or technology. Keep this to one page for quick reference.
- Don’t scatter foundational facts across multiple documents without cross-references—this makes continuity errors likely.
- Do define stakes and themes early: what’s the emotional or moral core of your story? Let that guide choices in character arcs and plotlines.
- Don’t confuse complexity with depth. A crowded world isn’t automatically more meaningful; clarity matters.
Do’s: Build With Purpose
These practices help you develop a world that feels lived-in and characters who resonate.
Do: Make Rules—and Respect Them
Readers invest when a world behaves consistently. If magic has a cost, name it, explain its limits, and apply those limits consistently. Rules produce drama: a character overcoming a known limitation feels earned.
Do: Prioritize Character over Catalogues
World details should serve people and plot. Use lists, maps, and itineraries to support character goals and emotional beats—not to show off how much you know. File sections that connect settings to character relationships are especially useful.
Do: Keep Notes Searchable and Cross-Referenced
Label entries (e.g., “Magic — Runes”, “Kingdoms — Suren Confederacy”) and add brief summaries. This saves time when drafting and editing and prevents accidental retconning.
Do: Document Cultural Logic
When you invent customs, languages, or institutions, write why they exist. What environmental pressures or historical events shaped them? Cultural plausibility makes even fantastical elements feel believable.
Do: Test Scenes for Emotional Truth
Run short scene sketches from different characters’ perspectives. If a place or event doesn’t feel different depending on who experiences it, your world may be underdeveloped emotionally.
Don’ts: Common Traps to Avoid
Certain habits derail fantasy projects quickly. Recognize these pitfalls early and you’ll save time and frustration.
Don’t: Overload with Info Dumps
Long explanatory passages hurt pacing. Instead, reveal lore through action, dialogue, and sensory detail. Keep your “files” thorough, but your narrative lean.
Don’t: Ignore Real-World Logic
Even the wildest magic or creatures should obey internal logic. Geography affects trade, climate shapes culture, and economics influence power. Ignoring practicalities creates plot holes readers notice.
Don’t: Make Every Character a Chosen One
Unique destiny is tempting, but overuse flattens stakes. Give secondary characters agency and meaningful goals; their choices should matter beyond supporting the protagonist.
Don’t: Be Afraid to Cut
Not every cool idea belongs in the main story. Archive tangents in your files and focus the narrative on what advances theme and character. Leaner drafts often read stronger.
Organizing Your Fantasy Files: Practical Systems
How you store information affects usability. Pick a structure that grows with your story and lets collaborators jump in quickly.
- Master File / World Bible: One-page summary, timeline, magic rules, and key maps.
- Character Dossiers: Motivations, arcs, appearance notes, and relationship graphs.
- Location Pages: Climate, economy, politics, notable people, and hooks for scenes.
- Scene Log: Short blurbs of finished and planned scenes with POV, purpose, and word count.
- Research & Inspirations: Images, historical notes, and cultural touchstones—clearly marked as inspiration vs canon.
Keep these files synchronized. A small index or changelog at the top of the master file helps track major updates.
Voice, Tone, and Pacing: Do’s and Don’ts for the Reader Experience
- Do vary pace: alternate scenes that advance plot, reveal character, and build atmosphere.
- Don’t frontload every mystery. Let curiosity unfold—give readers payoffs at satisfying intervals.
- Do craft distinct voices for POV characters. Unique diction and priorities make multiple perspectives feel fresh.
- Don’t confuse style for substance. Lyrical prose should still serve character and plot.
Collaboration and Revision: Best Practices
Many fantasy projects grow beyond a single author. Whether you’re working with beta readers, editors, or co-creators, clear communication about files prevents breakdowns.
- Do maintain a single source of truth for canon facts and update it after accepted changes.
- Don’t let multiple versions of the same document circulate unchecked—use versioning or dated backups.
- Do welcome feedback on plausibility and pacing; readers unfamiliar with your world are excellent testers of clarity.
Quick Tips: Small Habits That Improve Your Files
- Use short, searchable headings and tag entries with themes (e.g., “prophecy”, “trade routes”).
- Include sensory anchors for locations—smells, sounds, and textures make settings vivid.
- Keep a running list of unresolved questions to avoid accidental answers popping up later.
- Archive discarded ideas rather than deleting them—useful stuff often returns in revised form.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much detail is too much in a world bible?
Enough to keep you consistent and to spark scenes, but not so much that writers become paralyzed. If a detail never touches characters or plot, store it separately as optional lore.
When should I reveal the rules of my magic system?
Reveal the parts of the magic system needed for understanding the current plot. Broader mechanics can be introduced gradually as they become relevant.
Can I change big details mid-project?
Yes—if you track changes and assess ripple effects. Major revisions are easier earlier in the drafting process; later edits require careful continuity checks and often rewrites.
Conclusion: Build with Intention, Edit with Restraint
Fantasy files are powerful tools when used intentionally. Prioritize rules and emotional logic, keep notes organized and searchable, and resist the urge to show off every invention in the first draft. With clear do’s and don’ts guiding your process, your world will feel both expansive and coherent—inviting readers to believe in its wonders and care about the people who inhabit it.