Wildrow12 said:
Monkfish Acc. said:
... The majority of them?
The problem with most people is that they don't want their villains to be likeable.
I mean, they're the villains. The bad guys. You don't want people rooting for your bad guys, do you?
Give a villain a backstory, and you run the risk of him/her becoming relateable.
If someone is relateable, then they're probably likeable.
See, this is why you should always make sure you love all your characters.
If you write an antagonist you don't like, then he/she's not going to be very deep.
One of the biggest problems in all fiction, in my opinion.
Especially the Bible
Disclaimer: I am not an anti-theist, nor am I in any way against Christianity. It was just far too easy to resist.
Yeah, but there is a difference between making a villain well-rounded and making a card-board cut out that the protagonists knock down. Sometimes having a villain that we can relate to can be a good thing. Why? Because the most frightening or compelling villains are those who are reflections of ourselves through a cracked mirror.
That's what I was saying.
To make that cracked mirror villain, you need to care about him/her, and why he/she is doing the things they are doing.
Making a well-rounded character requires you to think about them. A lot.
And if you dislike your character, you're not going to want to think about them.
You'll take a few bits of personallity, decide you hate him/her, and therefor so will everyone else.
And then you birth a cardboard cut-out villain.