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As an author, you have a couple of superpowers which you can bestow upon your characters: Super perception. You know every detail in your story, including those a normal person wouldn't even noti...
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#3: Attribution notice added
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/48744 License name: CC BY-SA 4.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
#2: Initial revision
As an author, you have a couple of superpowers which you can bestow upon your characters: - **Super perception.** You know every detail in your story, including those a normal person wouldn't even notice. You can let your characters notice any small detail which will help them to accomplish their goals. - **Super memory.** Any factoid in your world is either invented by you or something you can look up in a matter of hours. So you can have your characters recall any relevant information on the spot. - **Super people knowledge.** You know when your characters are lying or bluffing or how they would behave in hypothetical situations. You can let your characters know that too. Call it intuition or knowing that person very well. - **Super thinking speed.** When someone follows a plan and something goes wrong, they need to make up a new plan on the spot. Due to the time pressure and stressfulness of the situation, this often goes badly in the real world. But as an author you have as much time as you need to come up with a new plan which you can then hand to your character within seconds. - **Super luck.** You can have events play out exactly the way which benefits your character most. You can then retroactively attribute this to the superior intellect and planning skill of your character. The main difference between a genius plan and a stupid plan is that the first one works and the latter one fails.