đđđđđđđđđđđ  is  a  text  generator  designed  specifically  for  roleplayers  using  discord.  It  helps  you  format  your  text  with  ease,  ready  to  be  used  in  Discord,  making  your  roleplay  posts  stand  out.  This  is  my  first  attempt  at  a  generator.  If  it  has  any  bugs  feel  free  to  dm  or  inbox  me.  Please, like or reblog if it helps with your interactions.
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Bold,  Italic,  Strikethrough,  and  Underline   âşÂ   Want  to  make  something  bold  or  italic?  You  can  click  the  B,  I,  S,  or  U  buttons  to  quickly  format  your  text  while  typing  in  the  editor.
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This  tool  uses  some  simple  coding  magic  behind  the  scenes.  Built  using  Quill.js,  a  text  editor  library,  and  some  custom  JavaScript,  it  allows  you  to  format  text  in  real  time.  When  you  apply  styles  (like  bold  or  italic),  it  changes  the  text  instantly,  and  when  you  hit  Generate,  it  converts  it  into  the  markdown  format  used  in  Discord.
Some characters donât collapse in a blaze of glory. No, they disintegrate politely, with color-coded planners and a frozen smile that says, "Everythingâs fine, Susan, stop asking."
They cling even harder to routines. Morning jog, 5 a.m. journaling, bullet-journaling their dogâs bowel movements. Because if they just keep checking boxes, they can pretend nothingâs crumbling underneath.
They hyperfixate on weird tiny details. The report can be on fire, but by god, they will die on the hill of choosing the right font. ("If I find the perfect serif, maybe my life will stop feeling like it's slipping through my fingers!")
They say "I'm just really busy!" like itâs a badge of honor, when itâs actually a giant red flag made out of calendar invites and suppressed emotions.
They can't finish anything anymore. They start 14 different projects, convinced each new thing will "finally get them back on track"âŚand end up ghosting every single one like a bad Tinder date.
Their compliments to others are laced with self-hate. "Youâre so talented, I could never pull that off" they say, smiling while beating themselves bloody on the inside.
They apologize. For everything. Late by two minutes? "Iâm so sorry." Sent an email? "Sorry if thatâs annoying!" Existing? "Sorry for breathing the same air!"
They're "fine." Always "fine." It's said with the same energy as someone duct-taping a broken chair and inviting you to sit on it.
They self-medicate with "productive" coping. Organizing their spice rack at midnight? Totally normal. Redesigning their resume for no reason while crying into a box of crackers? Absolutely fine. Nothing to see here.
They get defensive about the dumbest things. âOf course Iâm okay! Look at my to-do list!â (Sure, babe. Tell that to your bloodshot eyes and the way you just called your boss "Mom" on Zoom.)
Their version of self-care is making another list titled âHow to Fix Myselfâ and then immediately feeling guilty for needing it.
words for when your characters ______
accede, acceptance, accord, acknowledgment, acquiescence, align, avowal, bear, cohere, compromise, consent, contract, draft, enlist, give in/give up, go along/go along with, grant, negotiate, unanimous, yield
abjure, abuse, affront, attack, backstab, bad-mouth, belie, blacken, blemish, confront, curse, darn, defamation, defile, demur, denigrate, detract, dig, disclaim, discountenance, disgrace, disown, disparagement, downplay, explode, flout, fulminate, gainsay, gird, invective, jeer, lament, lecture, malign, minimize, mouth, needle, oppose, protest, put down, put-down, rebuff, refute, remonstrate, renunciation, run down, satirize, scold, show up, sit-in, slander, smear, snap, snub, squeal, sully, swearing, taunt, tirade, turn, underestimate, vituperation, write off, yammer
account for, admit, apprise, cite, clarify, come clean, concede, confirm, corroborate, defense, demonstrate, dilate, elucidate, enlighten, evidence, expand, explicate, gloss, illustrate, itemize, let on, palliate, plea, prove, recite, simplify, speak out/speak up, spell out, translator, warrant
aspersion, belie, disprove, profane
acknowledge, address, advertise, allow, allusion, apprise, bare, betrayal, blab, breathe, briefing, broadcast, chronicle, clue, come out with, confession, convey, debunk, define, detail, dictate, divulge, expose, feature, furnish, give, gossip, hint, intimate, issue, lecture, newscaster, orate, out of the closet, pass, post, proclaim, promulgate, publication, publish, release, reveal, show up, speak, spill, squeal, talk, tip, uncover, unveil, weatherperson, whisper
bar, educate, prescribe
advance, argument, bend, budge, carry, coerce, convince, discourage, draw, drum up, elicit, entice, forward, goad, hammer away/hammer into, induce, influence, invite, lobby, motivate, negotiation, pitch, prevail upon/prevail on, prompt, reason, spur, sway, urge, win/win over
assurance, avow, commitment, ensure, go back/go back on, oath, portend, vouch, warrant, word
advice, advocate, ask, come up with, connote, drum into, exhort, fish for, get at, guide, imply, insinuate, moralize, move, nomination, pontificate, preach, propose, recommend, urge
accent, acclamation, accredit, adulation, apotheosis, applause, benediction, bless, champion, citation, commend, compliment, congratulations, credit, dedicate, deify, elevate, endorse, eulogize, exalt, extol, flatter, flattery, glorify, homage, laud, lionize, obsequy, plaudits, puff, salute, thanks, tribute, worship
admonish, alert, caution, caveat, defy, enjoin, exhortation, foreboding, foretell, page, remind, warning
NOTE
The above are concepts classified according to subject and usage. It not only helps writers and thinkers to organize their ideas but leads them from those very ideas to the words that can best express them.
It was, in part, created to turn an idea into a specific word. By linking together the main entries that share similar concepts, the index makes possible creative semantic connections between words in our language, stimulating thought and broadening vocabulary. Writing Resources PDFs
Source â Writing Basics & Refreshers â On Vocabulary
Write Rivals With Chemistry So Hot It Hurts
â° Rivalry isnât hate â itâs obsession True rivals aren't just like, âugh, I dislike you.â Theyâre watching each other. Studying. Matching moves. Thinking about each other when they shouldnât. Hating how much they notice the other person. Rivalry is two sides of the same coin: hatredâs messy little sibling is fascination.
â°Â Let them know exactly where to hitâand hesitate The best rivals know exactly where to stick the knife. Childhood wounds. Secret fears. Insecurities no one else sees. But the most powerful moment isn't when they stab, it's when they hesitate. When they flinch. When the reader sees the care underneath the kill shot.
â°Â Make every win personal Every victory between rivals should feel like flirting with a knifeâs edge. They don't just beat each other; they get under each other's skin. "I outsmarted you" translates directly to "I'm the only one who really sees you." (And no, they're not ready to talk about why that makes them insane.)
â°Â Layer the attraction under everything You don't have to write "he found her hot" every five seconds. (Please don't.) Just lace it into the friction. The way they notice each otherâs hands. The way a sarcastic smile feels like a slap and a kiss at the same time. Let it be unspoken, which somehow makes it ten times louder.
â°Â Give them one private, honest moment and then destroy them for it That one late-night conversation. That brush of honesty. That accidental partnership in a bar fight. That glimpse of trust that leaves them both raw and feral because now itâs personal. Now it hurts. And guess what? Neither of them is stable enough to handle it like adults.
â°Â Let them wound each other in ways no one else can Rivals with chemistry are like: âI know your softest place. I know where you hurt. And maybe Iâm the only one who could ever touch it.â Terrifying. Intimate. Sexy. Self-destructive. Delicious.
â°Â Donât make it easy to flip to love If they hook up too soon, itâs cheap. If they confess too soon, itâs fake. They have to fight it. They have to screw it up. They have to almost kiss and almost kill each other in the same breath. The reward is sweeter because itâs hard won.
â°Â Make them jealous, but make it messy Not cutesy "oh no I'm jealous" moments. Ugly jealousy. Pride-shredding, shame-inducing jealousy. Watching their rival smile at someone else and feeling like they're drowning in acid and denial. Bonus points if they pretend theyâre above it and then spiral anyway.
â°Â Tension isnât just in the fightingâitâs in the silences Itâs the stare across the room that says âI hate you and I want youâ with zero words. Itâs the hand that lingers a second too long after pulling them out of danger. It's the unsent text. It's the "accidental" meeting. Sometimes not speaking burns hotter than the screaming matches.
â°Â Remember, they donât want to ruin each other, they want to matter At the core of a rival/chemistry dynamic is one brutal truth: âI want to matter to you more than anyone else does.â And theyâll deny it. And fight it. And wreck themselves over it. (And we, as the readers, will eat it with a goddamn spoon.)
(@urfriendlywriter | req by @rbsstuff @yourlocalmerchgirl anyone under the appropriate age, please proceed with caution :') hope this helps guys! )
writing smut depends on each person's writing style but i think there's something so gut-wrenchingly beautiful about smut when it's not very graphic and vivid. like., would this turn on a reader more?
"he kissed her, pulling her body closer to him."
or this?
"His lips felt so familiar it hurt her heart. His breathing had become more strained; his muscles tensed. She let herself sink into his embrace as his hands flattened against her spine. He drew her closer."
(Before proceeding further, these are all "in my opinion" what I think would make it better. Apply parts of the advice you like and neglect the aspects you do not agree with it. Once again I'm not saying you have to follow a certain type of style to write smut! Creative freedom exists for a reason!)
One may like either the top or the bottom one better, but it totally depends on your writing to make it work. Neither is bad, but the second example is more flattering, talking literally. (Here is me an year after writing this post, i think, either is amazing, depending on the context. the type of book you're writing, your writing style and preferences!)
express one's sensory feelings, and the readers will automatically know what's happening.
writing, "her walls clenched against him, her breath hitching with his every thrust" is better than writing, "she was about to cum".
(edit: once again, hi, it's me. Either is amazing depending on ur writing style. Everything at the end is about taste.)
here are some vocabulary you can introduce in your writing:
whimpered, whispered, breathed lightly, stuttered, groaned, grunted, yearned, whined, ached, clenched, coaxed, cried out, heaved, hissed
shivering, shuddering, curling up against one's body, squirming, squirting, touching, teasing, taunting, guiding, kneeling, begging, pining, pinching, grinding,
swallowing, panting, sucking in a sharp breath, thrusting, moving gently, gripped, biting, quivering,
nibbling, tugging, pressing, licking, flicking, sucking, panting, gritting, exhaling in short breaths,
wet kisses, brushing soft kisses across their body (yk where), licking, sucking, teasing, tracing, tickling, bucking hips, forcing one on their knees
holding hips, guiding the one on top, moving aimlessly, mindlessly, sounds they make turn insanely beautiful, sinful to listen to
some adverbs to use: desperately, hurriedly, knowingly, teasingly, tauntingly, aimlessly, shamelessly, breathlessly, passionately, delicately, hungrily
he sighed with pleasure
her skin flushed
he shuddered when her body moved against his
he planted kisses along her jawline
her lips turned red, messy, kissed and flushed.
his hands were on his hair, pulling him.
light touches traveled down his back
words were coiled at his throat, coming out as broken sobs, wanting more
he arched his back, his breath quivering
her legs parted, sinking into the other's body, encircling around their waist.
+ mention the position, how they're being moved around---are they face down, kneeling, or standing, or on top or on bottom--it's really helpful to give a clear picture.
+ use lustful talk, slow seduction, teasing touches, erratic breathing, give the readers all while also giving them nothing. make them yearn but DO NOT PROLONG IT.
sources to refer to for more:
gesture that gets me on my knees !!
(more to comeee, check out my hot or kisses prompts on my master list!)
Every line of dialogue is a tiny window into who your characters are, not just what they need to say. In real life, people rarely say exactly what they mean. They dodge, hint, exaggerate, fall silent, or say one thing when they feel another. Your characters should, too.
Good dialogue isnât about giving information cleanly â itâs about revealing layers.
For example:
A character could say âIâm fine,â while tightening her grip on the table so hard her knuckles go white.
He could say âYouâre impossible,â but his voice is soft, almost laughing â meaning youâre impossible and I love you for it.
She could say âI hate you,â in the rain, soaked through, desperate â meaning donât leave.
The surface words and the real emotions donât always match. Thatâs where the tension lives.
Thatâs what makes dialogue linger.
1. Layer emotion under the words.
Surface: What are they saying?
Subtext: What do they really mean?
Conflict: Whatâs holding them back from just saying it?
E.g. Two best friends sitting in a car after one of them has announced sheâs moving across the country.
She fiddled with the edge of her sleeve, staring straight ahead.
âYouâll forget about me after a week,â she said, light, almost laughing.
Surface: She says heâll forget about her.
Youâll forget about me after a week. (The outward words are casual, a joke.)
Subtext: Sheâs terrified of being left behind, feeling abandoned.
Iâm scared you donât care enough. I donât want to be alone. Please tell me youâll miss me.
Conflict: She doesnât want to beg him to stay â sheâs too proud, too afraid he doesnât feel the same.
She wants to stay close, to ask for reassurance â but fear of rejection makes her hide her true feelings under humor.
2. Use silence and body language.
⢠A pause can scream louder than a speech.
⢠A glance away can whisper Iâm afraid better than a thousand words.
E.g. After her apology, itâs his silence â heavy, raw, unspoken â that says everything words canât.
After an argument, she finally admits, in a shaking voice, âI didnât mean to hurt you.â
He says nothing.
Instead, he leans back against the wall, scrubbing a hand across his mouth, looking everywhere but at her.
The silence stretches between them â heavy, aching, almost unbearable.
When he finally does speak, his voice is hoarse: âI know.â
Breakdown:
Pause: His silence after her admission isnât empty â itâs full. It screams his hurt, his struggle to forgive, his overwhelming emotions.
Body Language: Scrubbing his hand across his mouth, looking away â it all whispers Iâm overwhelmed. Iâm hurt. I donât know how to say what Iâm feeling.
Result: The tension between them becomes almost physical without a single extra word.
3. Let characters miscommunicate.
⢠Real conversations are messy.
⢠People interrupt, misunderstand, react to what they think they heard.
⢠That tension is pure narrative gold.
E.g. A confession turns into heartbreak when he misunderstands her words and walks away before she can explain.
She pulls him aside at the crowded party, her voice low and urgent.
âI need to tell you something â about us,â she says.
He stiffens immediately, crossing his arms. âDonât bother. I get it. You regret everything.â
She blinks, hurt flashing across her face.
âNo, thatâs not what I meantââ
But heâs already turning away, anger burning in his chest.
She watches him go, the words she was really about to say â I love you â still caught in her throat.
Breakdown:
Miscommunication: He interrupts and jumps to conclusions, assuming the worst.
Realism: Conversations are messy; people hear what theyâre most afraid of hearing.
Narrative Gold: Now, thereâs heartbreak, regret, and a perfect setup for future emotional payoff when they finally untangle the truth.
Some brilliant examples to study:
âNormal Peopleâ by Sally Rooney â where miscommunication becomes the air between them.
âPride and Prejudiceâ by Jane Austen â where formality and wit mask tenderness and fear.
âSix of Crowsâ by Leigh Bardugo â where silence says what pride refuses to.
Dialogue is not just a tool for moving the plot.
Itâs a doorway into the heart of your story.
Open it carefully.
⤠Real Estate Listings (Yes, Seriously)
Looking up local listings in a place similar to your fictional town or city gives you surprising insightâaverage home styles, neighborhood layouts, what âaffordableâ means in that region, even local slang in the listings. + Great for, Â grounding your setting in subtle realism without hitting readers over the head with exposition.
⤠ Google Street View (Time to Creep Around Like a Setting Spy)
Drop into a random street in a town that resembles your fictional setting. Walk around virtually. Notice what's boring.Trash cans, streetlights, sidewalk cracks, old ads. + Great for: figuring out what makes a setting feel ânormalâ instead of movie-set polished.
⤠ Local Newspapers or Small Town Reddit Threads
Want voice? Culture? Weird local drama? This is where it lives. Whatâs in the classifieds? Whatâs pissing people off at town hall? + Great for:Â authentic small-town flavor, conflict inspiration, and the kind of gossip that fuels subplot gold.
⤠Fantasy Map Generator Sites (Even for Contemporary Settings!)
Not just for epic quests. Generating a map, even a basic one, can help you stop mentally teleporting your characters between places without any sense of space or distance.+ Great for:Â figuring out how long it takes to get from the protagonistâs house to that cursed gas station.
⤠ Music from or Inspired by the Region/Culture
Even fictional cities deserve a soundtrack. Listen to regional or cultural playlists and let the vibe soak into your setting. What kind of music would be playing in your characterâs world? + Great for: writing atmospherically and getting in the right emotional headspace.
⤠ Online Menus from Local Diners, Restaurants, or CafÊs
You want a setting that tastes real? Look at what people are actually eating. + Great for: writing scenes with meals that arenât just âsome soupâ or âgeneric coffee.â (Also, bonus points for fictionalizing weird specials: âTuesday Fish Waffle Nightâ is canon now.)
⤠ Yelp Reviews (Especially the One-Star Ones)
Looking for a spark of chaos? One-star Yelp reviews will tell you what your characters complain about and where the best petty drama lives. + Great for:Â worldbuilding quirks, local tensions, and giving your town character.
⤠ Real Estate âBefore/Afterâ Renovation Blogs
Youâll find the bones of houses, historical details, and how people preserve or erase the past. + Great for: backstory-laced settings, haunted houses, or any structure thatâs more than just a place, itâs a story.
⤠ Old Travel Books or Tourism Brochures
Especially the outdated ones. What used to be considered âthe pride of the townâ? Whatâs still standing? What was erased? + Great for:Â layering a setting with history, especially for second-generation characters or stories rooted in change.
When someone is...
Face/Body:
Avoidant/reduced eye contact
Drooping eyelids
Downcast eyes
Frowning
Raised inner ends of eyebrows
Dropped or furrowed eyebrows
Quivering lip/biting lip
Wrinkled nose
Voice:
Soft pitch
Low lone
Pauses/hesitant speech
Quiet/breathy
Slow speech
Voice cracks/breaking voice
Gestures/Posture:
Slouching/lowered head
Rigid/tense posture
Half formed/slow movement
Fidgeting or clasped hands
Sniffing or heavy swallows
Self soothing gestures (running hands over the arms, hand over heart, holding face in palms, etc)
How to Write SIBLING Relationships
If you're looking to write a sibling relationship but don't fully understand how a sibling relationship actually works, this is for you! As someone who has a younger brother, here are some points you'll want to consider when writing siblings!
First, let's talk about the three types of siblings and explore their general roles, expectations, and characterization within a family!
Starting with the oldest child, oftentimes, the eldest child is expected to act as the most responsible and as the role model. This doesn't mean they will go out of their way to set an example, but typically, no matter their personality and relationship with their younger siblings, they will have an innate sense of duty and protectiveness over their siblings. They want their siblings to enter the right path.
As the role model, the oldest child normally feels the most stress and anxiety, yet they also try not to show it to avoid worry from others. They highly value independence.
I'm sure you've heard of the jokes that the middle child is invisible child, and while those jokes are often exaggerated, the truth isn't terribly far off.
Between the eldest and youngest child, the middle child has a more difficult time standing out, which may lead to more reckless behavior for attention. They are characterized as more free-spirited and might act as a mediator between the youngest and oldest.
They will likely be more responsible and experienced than the youngest but can act similarly to the youngest.
The youngest child can look like many things. Sometimes, you'll see the youngest is the most spoiled because they're the parents' favorite, and sometimes they're ignored because they have the least experience. Despite that, they have their fair share of pressures and burdens because they are often expected to meet, if not surpass, the achievements of their older siblings.
A sibling relationship differs from a typical friendship. They WILL find each other more annoying, but that doesn't mean they can't get along.
Siblings are also more honest and nit-pickier with each other. For example, if a friend changes the radio without asking, the character might not think too much of it. However, if their brother changes the radio without asking, then the character will likely feel irritated and call them out for it.
And when I say honest, I don't mean that they're super honest with each other emotionally, because that's not always the case. When I mean honest, I mean they're rather honest with each other at a surface, verbal level. They hardly hesitate to say their thoughts and can be pushy about them.
They will have an opinion on everything.
If you've ever had some friends that have siblings, I'm sure that you're aware sometimes siblings can be similar and sometimes they're total opposites.
However, this doesn't mean that a pair of "opposite" siblings are ying and yang. While they may seem visibly different, such as fashion sense, and whether they're an introvert or extrovert, there are still shared traits that they hold. This is especially true if they're biological siblings and/or raised in the same environment together.
They influence each other, so there's bound to be some similarities in personality or values no matter how distinct each one is.
No matter what, siblings love each other. They might not say it, they might not express it, or they might show it in a toxic and unhealthy way, but there's always an underlying sense of familial love. These are the people that your character has (or was supposed to) grown up with, after all.
There's going to be attachment, they will defend each other, even if they claim to hate the other.
Okay guys, now let's move on to parents and how they might play a part in sibling relationships!
Regardless of whether you have a sibling or not, you've likely experienced what it feels like to be compared to someone else. I'm not saying people with siblings have it worse, but they do have a wider range of people to be compared with.
It's not uncommon for parents to compare their children to each other, and it's not uncommon either for a child to compare themselves to their siblings. Sometimes, outsiders and/or distant family members will also compare the siblings, causing feelings of inferiority and envy.
When siblings have a poor relationship, it can sometimes be because of the parents.
Siblings fight and argue a LOT. However, you'd be mistaken if you thought a parent resolves all of these fights.
The truth is, after a certain age is reached, parents won't step in or resolve a fight unless it's right in front of them. They expect their children to be mature enough to solve their issues out, and honestly? They were tired of breaking up conflicts years ago.
Bonus point: yes, siblings can fight often, but the quarrels are usually forgotten pretty quick too. I've had several fights with my brother in which we were back to normal literally a few hours later the spat. Will I remember it for the next year? Absolutely. But do I care anymore? Not really.
This post may not apply to all siblings--everyone has different types of relationships--but here are some good points to start at!
TL;DR: The eldest sibling has the most responsibility, the middle sibling is a blend between the oldest and youngest and often strives for attention, and while the youngest sibling may look like they have it the easiest, they have their pressures too. Sibling relationship does not mimic a friendship, and they will have similar traits despite distinct personalities. They love and care for each other, even if it doesn't look that way. Having siblings sets up for many comparisons between them, and parents won't always resolve sibling spats.
I'll likely release some posts detailing how to write specific sibling relationships, so let me know if you want to see one in particular! Thank you for making it here!
Happy writing~
3hks <3
(For the emotionally repressed, the quiet imploders, the âIâm fineâ liars.)
â§ Cancels plans they were excited for.
â§ Sleeps too muchâor barely at all.
â§ Snaps at tiny things, then immediately regrets it.
â§ Canât stand silence, suddenly always has noise on.
â§ Dresses in oversized clothes to hide their body.
â§ Laughs too loudly. Smiles too tightly.
â§ Picks at their nails, lips, or skin.
â§ Constantly checks their phone, even though no one is texting.
â§ Stops answering messages altogether.
â§ Forgets to eatâor pretends they already did.
â§ Eyes scan the room like theyâre waiting for something bad.
â§ Overcommits. Canât say no. Burns out quietly.
â§ Stops doing the things they love âjust because.â
â§ Apologizes too often.
â§ Avoids mirrors.
â§ Canât sit stillâbut wonât go outside.
â§ Says âIâm tiredâ instead of âIâm hurting.â
â§ Tries to clean everything when their life feels out of control.
â§ Uses sarcasm as armor.
â§ Hugs people just a second too longâand then acts like nothing happened.