Aww dude, you're killin' us here.
sirocco wrote:My main hero is far from the hero icon -strong and goody-goody- rather the scheming type. Well he is one of those people that ended on Tartarus from Earth in my Current Era.
He doesn't know why he is there. He has unresolved issue on Earth and don't even know if he will ever be able to go back.
His first concern is survival then achieving a somewhat decent life on a world where nearly everyone hates its guts.
None of this means anything. The whole goddamn world is obsessed with dark and gritty anti-heroes that saying he's not strong and nice is just like saying "he's kinda like all those dudes in all those video games and movies, only it's my idea, so he's cool." At the moment, having a "strong goody-goody" guy would be the least overdone archetype, so don't think you're winning and special points by focusing on Dirk McNasty here.
sirocco wrote:1- he start as a slave whose only concern is to not get whipped for being to lenient (I wanted to start on a grim tone)
2- he make a special encounter that shows him how pitiful he was and for the first time he does something that has no benefit for him (some kind of suicidal mission, if you want). (Un)fortunately he survives but trigger disastrous events (he wanted to do a good thing but that didn't work out very well for all his former friends)
This is so bad. So his first good deed is a suicide mission or something similarly absurd--what? Imagine someone you know who actually only thinks of himself--now try to imagine him going on a suicide mission for someone else, does that work? Plus, didn't he start off as being "too lenient" or something? Is he a slave that whips other slaves? Who are his friends in this situation? The oppressive slave-owners? The guys he's whipping? So after this magical revelation he decides to engage in heroic redemptive suicide, but there are Unforseen Consequences, and now people are sad. This isn't dark, it's just somewhat childish. If you really want to make things grim, don't make it so cartoonishly evil, since it sounds more like he's intellectually lazy and cowardly than anything else.
sirocco wrote:3- he flees from that first place and is rescued by a group of mercenaries. Considering his situation, he has to show some loyalty to his new friends which means dirtying his hands for the greater good. (I want to explore propaganda and mind manipulation techniques here.
Mercenaries don't fight for the greater good, you realize, they're mercenaries--they fight for a paycheck. Nor do they generally do a lot of rescuing unless they're mercs hired by the other side (is there an other side) and they're being told to pick up worthless stragglers. I'm not being overly hostile here, or saying that all mercs are evil bastards, but all of this stuff is so very cliche so far and all you've done up to this point is establish that he's a bit of an evil self-absorbed douche who had a moment of clarity and decided he doesn't want to be so evil anymore. There's a lot of better ways to do this than kinda do a half-baked version of the Conan movie's intro.
sirocco wrote:4- His first hope of salvation comes when he encountered other survivors from Earth and starts to wonder what kind of life he wants to have
5- He makes the choice to just join the humans (and particularly a certain woman) and leave those that helped him (Haven't yet thought about that). He marries the girl, has a kid and a relatively nice life.
Interest... evaporating...
Please, no romance sub-plot yet. We don't even like this son-of-a-whore yet, since he's basically done nothing of value nor redeemed himself nor even deserved anything good. He's just decided to join his own species (oh wow, big sacrifice there) and leave someone who helped him (who is... non human? And who you haven't thought about yet?) and settle down? That's it? Why? So much for a greater good eh?
sirocco wrote:6- He loses his kid (haven't thought of a better way to show that peaceful life cannot work out for him) an his wife.
Cliche and terrible. All you've done is stuff his family into the refrigerator in order to make him feel bad, which is just a cheap and easy gut-shot which probably won't even work since how long have we even known these two for? How is this a demonstration that a peaceful life won't work for him? Maybe he should have been
more peaceful, and moved to some place nice and quiet, unless you're designing a setting in which murdering bands simply rampage around and stab families no matter where you are. If I moved out to Afghanistan and I got shot at, my first thought wouldn't be "A peaceful life will never work for me!" but "Holy shit maybe I shouldn't be in fucking Afghanistan!" You don't need to shove the hero into conflict by burning down his life. Also, none of this benefits from the bullshit 1-5 entries. You could frankly start right here, Seven Samurai style.
sirocco wrote:7- He just stays among the humans protecting them from any harm and gradually turning into some kind of prophet for them (the usual Promising Land stuff). Until they realize that in fact he has completely lost it and decide to just get rid of him (survival of the group is more important than individuals).
Wallbanger material. Hero has gone from being uninteresting to actively offensive to the reader, and at this point we'd rather be reading about the peasentfolk than this dumbass. Please do not do this. This is a bad plot development unless you're doing it to someone we do not have to read much about. A similar transformation happened to Lancelot after his fall from grace, but we were mercifully spared much of it. Furthermore, this doesn't jive with number 6.
sirocco wrote:8- Once again he survives and meet one of his former mercenary friend that tries to get him back on his feet.
9- They work together again but no longer for the same reason. This time our hero realize that what happened to him happened also to a lot of people and that he can no longer just let it happen. Yet helping one person at a time won't solve the problem.
10- Long plot on how he tries to create the perfect country of peace and love and etc.
This is awful, terrible, very bad plot. Basically, stick with your core concepts and throw the rest of this out. What you're doing is making your character yo-yo back and forth between incompatible mental states, which just makes him look insane. Plus, why the hell are these mercenaries showing up again as a force for the Greater Good? Does the Greater Good pay for their monthly stipend of rum and whores? Not only do you need like 4 more characters, but you need to stop focusing on what happens to him and more about what he's feeling during these times. What you've done is cram a lot of 'stuff' into the story without there being any impact whatsoever. Look at Unforgiven--you don't need a million bad things to happen to a character to give them a bit of an edge. If you made a book out of Unforgiven your character would feel harder, grimmer, sadder and more sympathetic than this guy ever will. The reader will catch on pretty fast that you keep dropping a refrigerator on every source of happiness or normalcy, which isn't a story as much as a string of events with some narration.
sirocco wrote:So far I thought he would be the kind of guy to say :
Life leads to Hell or Heaven.
No one can tell you how it ends. But they all know that you have only two choice : the road or the cliff
The other people plots just revolved around his own. But well it still seems to me like a rpg story. Your thoughts?
This is also a terrible quote. Not only does it not make sense, but it doesn't make him look grim--it just makes him look angsty, like some dumbass teen vampire. If you want him to be weary and grim, don't make him such an idiot. If he's buried his wife and child, seen good men die because he tried to help them, dragged his ass across the fields of perdition because nothing but meanness and desperation had any hold left on him only to end up going mad from it all and seeing a blazing trail to a promised land... and then back again to nothing, he's not going to be so melodramatic about death and life. And if he is, then he's going to have to be that kind of a big-mouthed jackass the whole way through, and will be entirely insufferable.
I think you need to do what actors do when they test out a character--write down some lines, or a scene, make him interact. Think out some conversations, some stuff he'd do and say, at points in his life, and establish the growth of the character. If that kind of trite, off-the-shelf philosophy is the best he can come up with after that, then he's really not deep enough to be a main character at all. Either way, he sure as hell ain't no hero.