Saturday, June 28, 2025

Villains With Depth – Writing Antagonists Who Aren’t Just Evil

What makes a villain memorable? It’s not the black cloak, the evil laugh, or even the body count. It’s the reason behind it all.

In fantasy, it’s all too easy to fall into the trap of the one-note villain — the Big Bad who does bad things just because they’re evil. But if you want your story to stand out, your antagonist needs just as much depth as your protagonist. Maybe more.

The Villain Believes They’re the Hero

The best villains don’t twirl their mustaches and call themselves evil. They believe they’re right. They believe they’re saving the world — or at least doing what needs to be done. Maybe they see your hero as a naïve idealist. Maybe they have a vision of a better world, and they’re willing to make hard choices your protagonist refuses to make.

Give your villain a worldview. Make it make sense — even if it horrifies your readers.

Motivation Is Key

What does your antagonist want? Power is a common answer, but it’s often a shortcut. Why do they want power? Are they trying to reclaim control after a lifetime of being helpless? Do they believe only they can fix a broken system? Or are they trying to protect someone, even if it means burning the world?

The deeper the motivation, the stronger the conflict.

The Hero-Villain Mirror

A truly compelling antagonist reflects something about your protagonist. They’re often two sides of the same coin — similar goals, different methods. When done well, this contrast deepens both characters and gives your story moral complexity. The reader should wonder, What if the hero had made one different choice?

That tension is where great storytelling lives.

Let Them Be Human

Give your villain small moments of humanity. Let them grieve. Let them laugh. Let them love. A villain who shows tenderness in one scene and cruelty in the next is far more chilling — and believable — than one who’s evil all the time.

Nuance isn’t weakness. It’s realism.

In the End…

You don’t need your readers to like your villain — but you should aim for understanding. A good antagonist leaves your audience unsettled, thoughtful, and maybe even a little conflicted.

Because sometimes, the scariest villains aren’t monsters.

They’re just people.

Saturday, June 21, 2025

More Than Swords – Crafting Powerful Women in Fantasy

In fantasy fiction, we often celebrate epic battles, bold quests, and magical powers. But too often, when it comes to female protagonists, “strong” becomes a narrowly defined box—usually with a sword inside it. The armored warrior woman who shows no weakness and fights like a man is now a trope all its own. And while there’s nothing wrong with a woman wielding a blade, reducing female strength to physical combat alone sells short the complexity of real, powerful women.

So let’s break that mold. Let’s talk about what it truly means to write a strong female protagonist—and how you, as a fantasy writer, can craft women who are not just strong, but unforgettable.


The Problem with “Strong Female Characters”

For years, “strong female character” was code for a woman who could fight, sass, and generally perform toughness. Think stoic assassins, grizzled generals, or brooding rogues—only female. These characters often act detached, emotionally repressed, and, ironically, not very well-developed.

Why? Because strength is not personality. A character who kicks down doors but has no internal life isn’t strong—she’s flat. True strength comes from agency, complexity, and depth. If a character only exists to “prove” she’s not weak, you’re not writing a strong woman—you’re writing a reaction to male-dominated tropes.


What Strength Really Looks Like

Let’s reframe strength. Yes, strength can be physical—but it can also be emotional, intellectual, spiritual, or relational. A strong woman might lead a rebellion—or she might raise a child in a hostile world. She might swing a sword—or negotiate peace between warring nations. Strength is endurance. Compassion. Strategy. Faith. Sacrifice. The ability to choose and act despite fear.

Ask yourself:

  • What does this character value?
  • What are her goals—and what is she willing to risk for them?
  • What breaks her? What heals her?
  • Where does her strength live?

When you build a character around those questions, you create someone memorable—not because she’s strong like a man, but because she’s strong like herself.


Diversity Within Strength

Not all women are the same. (Obvious, but worth repeating.) Your female protagonist doesn’t have to be fiery, outspoken, or aggressive to be powerful. Quiet strength is still strength. A woman who builds, listens, teaches, or heals can be just as heroic as one who slays dragons.

Here are just a few archetypes to explore—beyond the warrior:

  • The Strategist – Cunning, patient, always thinking ahead.
  • The Nurturer – Protects others, holds communities together.
  • The Seeker – Driven by discovery, change, or truth.
  • The Survivor – Lives through trauma or loss and finds meaning.
  • The Outsider – Challenges tradition and forges a new path.

And of course, these archetypes can blend. A woman might be a warrior and a nurturer. A queen and a rebel. Don’t be afraid to let your female characters contain contradictions. Real people do.


Let Her Be Flawed

A perfect character is a boring character—no matter their gender. Yet sometimes writers hesitate to give female leads real flaws, especially in male-dominated genres. We worry they’ll be seen as “unlikable.”

Let that go.

Give her flaws. Let her be wrong. Let her fail. Let her doubt herself. Let her grow.

What readers love isn’t perfection—it’s transformation. A woman who changes, who stumbles and rises, who learns from her pain and her victories—that’s the kind of protagonist who sticks with us long after the last page.


Relationships Matter

Fantasy can be isolating—lone heroes on long roads, separated from everything they love. But strong characters are shaped by their relationships, and this is especially important for women, whose narratives have often been defined by their relationships rather than through them.

Let your female lead love deeply. Let her have friends, enemies, mentors, siblings, lovers, rivals, and students. Show how these bonds push her, challenge her, and give her new perspective.

Romance can be part of her story—but it doesn’t have to define it. The key is balance: she has her own arc, and her relationships enrich it rather than replace it.


Avoid the Backlash Protagonist

Sometimes, in trying to subvert tropes, we overcorrect. We strip away femininity. We make the character “not like other girls.” We pit her against other women to prove her worth. That’s not progressive—that’s just a different form of stereotype.

Let your female protagonist coexist with other complex women. Let them be allies, adversaries, or both. Build a world where multiple women exist on different paths, with different strengths, goals, and ideals.

Because “strong” doesn’t mean “alone.”


Examples That Get It Right

Want inspiration? Look to:

  • Brienne of Tarth (A Song of Ice and Fire) – A warrior, yes, but also loyal, vulnerable, and deeply principled.
  • Sabriel (The Old Kingdom Trilogy) – Faces necromantic horrors with resolve, grief, and growth.
  • Egwene al’Vere (The Wheel of Time) – Not physically combative, but sharp, ambitious, and politically astute.
  • Moana (Disney’s Moana) – A young girl driven by love for her people, navigating fear, tradition, and destiny.

Each of these characters is “strong,” but in radically different ways—and none of them are reduced to a trope.


In the End… Make Her Real

A well-written female protagonist isn’t just a “strong female character.” She’s a person. Complicated. Flawed. Brave. Afraid. Tender. Fierce. Capable of terrible mistakes and incredible resilience.

So write her like a human, not a message. Let her live on the page as fully as you’d let any male hero live. And when she does fight—whether with a sword, a spell, or her own bare hands—make sure it’s because she chose to, not because she had to prove she could.


Let’s redefine strength—one unforgettable woman at a time.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Worldbuilding That Feels Real – How to Make Fantasy Worlds Come Alive

When readers open a fantasy novel, they’re looking for more than just swords and sorcery. They’re searching for a world they can fall into—one that feels so vivid, so lived-in, that they can almost smell the marketplace spices or feel the sting of winter air in a mountain village. That kind of immersion doesn’t happen by accident. It takes purposeful, layered worldbuilding.

Start With Culture, Not Geography

Maps are fun. But readers don’t fall in love with mountains—they fall in love with the people who live in their shadow. Start with culture: What do your people believe? What do they value? What are their fears, superstitions, and celebrations? Once you understand their worldview, the geography becomes a reflection of that culture rather than just background scenery.

Language, Slang, and How People Talk

You don’t need a full conlang like Tolkien, but a few unique words, sayings, or gestures can go a long way. Maybe your desert nomads say “May your water run cool” as a blessing, or a river-bound culture uses river metaphors in everyday speech. Language reveals what matters to a society—use that to enrich your world.

History That Isn’t Just Backstory

Even if you never info-dump your world’s history, you should still know it. Wars, migrations, dynasties, religious schisms—all of these shape how people live now. Let that history leave fingerprints: a border town with an old ruin, a noble family that refuses to eat apples because of a betrayal long ago. When your world remembers its past, it feels real.

Consider the Mundane

Where do people get their food? What do they do for fun? Who repairs their shoes? Real worlds are filled with everyday moments. Including small, grounded details helps balance the grand sweep of magic and battle. A soldier worrying about his worn boots might be more compelling than the details of the kingdom’s ancient prophecy.

Religion, Myth, and Meaning

Even the smallest villages have gods, ghosts, or something sacred. Whether you create a complex pantheon or a handful of old legends, belief systems provide structure and emotional depth. They influence politics, family life, and personal choices. A believable religion doesn’t have to be central to the plot—but it should exist in the world, just like it does in ours.

Show, Don’t Lecture

The golden rule of writing applies doubly to worldbuilding. Don’t stop your plot to explain how your world works. Instead, let it show through the characters’ interactions with it. A child offering bread to a shrine on the roadside says more than three pages of exposition.

Magic Should Have Limits

If your world has magic, define its cost. Readers will forgive almost anything if they understand the rules. A character who bleeds from their nose every time they use a spell will always feel more grounded than one who waves their hands and warps reality without consequence.

Make It Messy

Perfect worlds aren’t believable. Real worlds are full of contradiction—traditions that don’t make sense anymore, cultural clashes, political corruption, ancient laws no one enforces. When your world has rough edges, it becomes more human.


Final Thoughts

The best fantasy worlds don’t just look different from ours—they feel alive. They echo with laughter in the taverns and rumors in the alleyways. They have contradictions, secrets, and scars. If you want your readers to lose themselves in your world, then give them something worth exploring.

And don’t worry about getting everything right the first time. Worldbuilding is a process—layer by layer, choice by choice. Keep building. Your world is waiting.


What’s your favorite fantasy world and why does it feel real to you? Drop your thoughts in the comments—I’d love to hear them.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Writing Female Protagonists in Fantasy – Strength Beyond the Sword


Fantasy has always been a genre of escapism and empowerment, filled with dragons, magic, and battles for kingdoms. But it’s also a space where, for a long time, the female protagonist was either absent, sidelined, or written through a male lens—either a passive princess or a sword-wielding caricature of a "strong female character."

Thankfully, the genre has evolved, and writers today have the opportunity (and responsibility) to craft female leads who are fully realized people—complex, powerful, flawed, and relatable. Strength, after all, doesn't always come from swinging a sword. It can come from perseverance, empathy, leadership, wit, or even the courage to make the wrong decision and face the consequences.

In this post, we’re going to look at how to write female protagonists in fantasy who are more than just tropes, how to avoid the common pitfalls, and why a broader view of strength enriches your story and your world.


Sword-Swinging Stereotypes and the “Strong Female Character”

Let’s get this out of the way: there’s nothing wrong with a sword-wielding woman. There’s a deep satisfaction in watching (or writing) a female warrior cut down her enemies with a battle cry. The problem is when that becomes the only definition of strength.

The “strong female character” trope has too often meant a woman who behaves exactly like a man in battle, while shedding any softness, vulnerability, or femininity. She’s emotionally closed off, inexplicably good at everything, and often exists only to prove she can “keep up with the boys.” She may have no real backstory or emotional depth—and crucially, she rarely changes over the course of the story.

Real strength, in fiction and in life, looks different. It’s not about erasing femininity or replicating male heroism. It’s about honoring the complexity of the character.


Ask the Big Questions First

When you sit down to write your female protagonist, start by asking the same deep questions you’d ask of any protagonist:

  • What does she want?
  • What’s standing in her way?
  • What does she fear?
  • What is she willing to sacrifice?
  • How does she grow?

Character is not gendered. Good writing means understanding what drives your character and how she responds to her world—not just what she looks like swinging a sword.

That said, gender does affect how characters interact with the world, especially in societies with rigid expectations. So you also want to ask:

  • How does her culture view women?
  • What expectations does she resist, embrace, or challenge?
  • How do others treat her because of her gender?
  • How has her experience shaped the way she sees power, safety, loyalty, or ambition?

These questions can help you root your female protagonist in the fabric of her world—not in spite of her identity, but because of it.


Different Kinds of Strength

Strength in a female protagonist might look like:

  • Emotional resilience: surviving loss, hardship, or trauma and choosing to keep going.
  • Intellectual strength: solving problems others can’t, seeing patterns, or outwitting a villain.
  • Compassion: choosing mercy over revenge, understanding over violence.
  • Leadership: inspiring loyalty, building coalitions, holding power responsibly.
  • Defiance: refusing to conform, even when it’s dangerous or costly.
  • Sacrifice: giving up something she loves for the greater good.

Your protagonist doesn’t need to be able to fight with a sword to be brave. Maybe her bravery is standing up to her father, or escaping an abusive relationship, or telling the truth when everyone wants her to lie. Maybe it’s daring to fall in love. Maybe it’s choosing to become a swordfighter, when no one believes she can.

These types of strength are deeply human—and they create characters readers care about.


Avoiding the Pitfalls

Here are a few common traps when writing female protagonists in fantasy—and how to avoid them:

1. The One Girl in the World Syndrome

This is when your fantasy world is somehow 90% male, and your heroine is “not like other girls.” She’s the only woman who fights, the only one who’s brave, or the only one who matters to the story.

Fix it: Populate your world with many kinds of women—warriors, mothers, merchants, spies, queens, witches, scholars. Let your protagonist exist in a world where other women have influence, opinions, and stories of their own.

2. The No-Fault Flaw

You give your female protagonist a “flaw” that isn’t really a flaw. She’s too caring. Or she works too hard. These flaws are designed not to risk reader affection.

Fix it: Give her real flaws—pride, fear, jealousy, selfishness—and let her grow. Readers connect with characters who fail, learn, and evolve.

3. The Romance Token

She exists mainly to be someone’s love interest, or her entire arc is defined by who she does or doesn’t love.

Fix it: If there’s a romance, make sure it’s part of her journey—not the point of her existence. And please, let her have an arc that doesn’t revolve around the male lead.


Feminine Power and Magic

In fantasy, magic often reflects inner truth. So how does a female protagonist wield power?

Maybe her power is rooted in healing, creation, or intuition. Maybe it’s elemental. Maybe it’s dark and terrifying. Maybe she’s powerful because she chooses not to use it unless necessary. Magic systems in fantasy can help explore what power looks like when it isn’t about domination.

Let her magic be mysterious. Let it be messy. Let it have consequences.

And let it be hers.


Examples of Powerful Female Protagonists (Done Well)

If you’re looking for inspiration, here are a few memorable female protagonists from fantasy who go beyond the sword:

  • Egwene al’Vere (The Wheel of Time) – Politically shrewd, emotionally complex, and deeply committed to her values, Egwene grows into one of the most powerful leaders in the series.
  • Ged’s Aunt (A Wizard of Earthsea) – Though not the main character, she quietly influences the protagonist’s path through knowledge, restraint, and the passing of old magic.
  • Tiffany Aching (Discworld) – A young witch whose strength lies in empathy, stubbornness, and knowing what needs to be done—even if it’s unpleasant.
  • Sabriel (Old Kingdom trilogy) – A necromancer who must walk into death to save the living. Strong, yes—but also fearful, uncertain, and deeply human.

These women are not all warriors. But they’re all unforgettable.


Final Thoughts: Let Her Be Real

The most compelling female protagonists in fantasy aren’t perfect. They aren’t superheroes in corsets. They’re people—people with fears, doubts, passions, and dreams. They cry. They laugh. They screw up.

And they keep going.

Let her be soft. Let her be angry. Let her be clever and wrong and brave and unsure.

Let her story matter.

Because when you do that, you're not just writing a “strong female character.” You're writing a great character—and that’s what readers will remember.