Bubbles

Bubbles

I'm Bubbles.

Currently on hiatus.

registered at: Aug 13, 2020
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    Participant - MAL x Honeyfeed Writing Contest 2021
    Finalist - MAL x Honeyfeed Writing Contest 2022
    Participant - MAL x Honeyfeed Writing Contest 2023

    Jul 31, 2021

    Hiho.

    Quite an eventful chapter we have here. We join the two right after they've escaped the dreadful infected only to find out that, a la Resident Evil, they are much more varied and dangerous than we have expected. Personally, I find this mildly post-apocalyptic bit fascinating, especially with the slowly supernatural presence of the mist in our midst. But with this general remark out, let's jump into the content. :3

    The two's dynamic is not very changed from the previous chapters, but we do get a bit more of a glimpse into who they are at their core. Gabriel is disproportionately focused on here, character-wise, therefore Celeste appears a little bit unpolished. Might be worth giving her a little bit more attention in what shines through her dialogue. That isn't to say that as it stands, their interaction isn't good, however, as that would be a lie. The build-up is adamantly rising towards a very satisfying and well-rounded conclusion. :3

    As for the plot, it progresses at one of the steadiest paces I've been graced with. But that is a double-edged sword. Partly due to this the tension that we're supposed to experience gets a bit lost since everything moves the same. I would like to see certain bits, particularly the serpent's passing and the last ditch separation, a little more explored, dived into with a bit of introspection. Slowing down adds impact and impact is what we need in this scenario.

    As for the style, I'd check over some of the paragraphs. Whilst the more action-oriented bits benefit from a clear-cut sentence structure, the more narrative bits can become a little bit droning, when everything is not played with at all. We do get imagery woven in, but when the focus is always on the person that does the action and occasionally on the object, we can't feel anything else. You could add a little bit of grip by employing personification, a figure of speech I've rarely seen you use, but that could provide a layer of depth to the situation at hand, be it used to emphasise the environment, the monsters or the bits and pieces of the characters themselves (i.e. clothing, wounds, sounds).

    That's it.

    Bubbles, out. :3

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    3
    By the Shores of Time
    By the Shores of Time
    Chapter:4

    Jul 31, 2021

    Hiho.

    Let's get down to business.

    There is a very jarring difference in the way the action was written here when put against the first chapter. And whilst it still reads enjoyable for the most part there are the following notable distinctions:

    1. Repetitions in-between actions have become more common, to the point where they halt the otherwise fluent action in its tracks.
    2. The freeze-frame flow of the previous chapter has been replaced to a more shifting one, one that requires a lot more movement and explanation that you have mistakenly added too much of, inadvertently causing the mistake at point #1.
    3. There is a lot of what I can only describe as clutter. Particularly evident during the scene with the two soldiers. Slightly disproportionate with the 'chasing'.

    As always, however, your dialogues are high quality, loaded with enough characterisation in them that narration shouldn't even bother describing anything more. And the little history at the end was touching; brief as it was it conveyed a strong emotion from Astri. And whilst I dislike the trope of second-hand empathy, I'll begrudgingly let it slide, just this once.

    Unfortunately, there isn't anything else I can muster up. If anything, this chapter was a respite, since it was a very self-contained episode, much unlike the previous one. It only paves the way to something greater, which I suppose I'll see when the round robin lands on you again. :3 And I'll say that I'm mildly looking forward to when that happens.

    Bubbles, out. :3

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    1
    UnCrowned New Cover
    UnCrowned
    Chapter:2

    Jul 31, 2021

    Hiho.

    I could go in great depth praising the artistic direction you have followed here. The vivid backdrop being painted with minute glides of the wordy handbrush and the brimming emotion gently infused into every single bit of scenery. It is descriptive, overtly so, but it doesn't detract at all. For me, at least, for the webnovel reader I couldn't care less. It is apt and portrays a vivid picture of a murky castle set in the dead of night, with an atmosphere to match. And I believe it is this tone that might carry this story forward the best, were it not for the worldbuilding and the heart of the characters gathered by the hearth.

    But with this shallow praise out of the way, we have to dissect some issues, pressing or not it is not up to me.

    For one, the information that is being presented, whilst mostly in easy to stomach bits, carries a veil of improbable motivation. It is a rather unfortunate trope of high fantasy to have characters break into a wistful reflection of bygone times when a wish long thought impossible is unfulfilled. And Marea shows the exact same propensity towards recollection. Harmfully so. Because it doesn't take a lot to ask why a husband she's known for upwards of five years, needs to be made privy to something that is so fundamentally congruent with her joie de vivre. Reminiscing is acceptable, natural, but there is a level of depth that needn't be crossed, one that separates the plot-oriented reason and the character-oriented reason of the exposition. There is a great pause between Marea's greeting of her husband and her seemingly realising that, indeed, her husband is home, and that she is, indeed, his wife before or after she is the Lady of Silverscale. And were it lessened and tempered, that expositional break, very entertaining as it was, might've been splendid. But prolonged as it is, it is much too wide.

    Minute issues exists at the level of style. Be them run-on sentences or certain redundancies that further clutter an otherwise masterfully packed description, they are rare, but worth looking into. And with this tiny interlude aside, I will address the other dragon in the throneroom.

    Limited third person is not meant to be subjective. Merely, it's a chosen limitation, narrating together with the character but separated from them. As such, the narrative tone shouldn't change as the heads jump. And whether by design, by fatigue or by accident, this has happened as soon as Silverscale has begun to fall. We change from accompanying Alaine to accompanying his son, Blake, but the narration, once a spectacle of verbosity, dulls out. And that is fundamentally jarring and an immersion break. As genuine as you might've wanted to make it, the eyes of a child aren't what this perspective demands. And whilst peering into it can warrant the narrator to borrow certain marks of the character into their speech (not subjective, mind you), the switch is much too noticeable and sudden to be enjoyable. At least, that is how I view it. For all I know there might be some hidden stylistic imperative that I might not be aware of and that you are following with vehemence. And if that were the case, whilst I still stand by my points, I do apologise.

    As for the length and hook factor of the prologue, it gets a begrudging pass. Whilst the very first sentence and paragraph do a serviceable job, they are unfortunately lackluster in the midst of other fantasy I've come to know. The length is much too grand and the focus is twofold, which makes it hard for me to figure whether I should be invested in the worldbuilding or the character that is supposedly going to start it all. If anything, either half could be split, preferably the latter, and then reiterated later in the plot to a greater effect. The mystery of not knowing either the reason or the cause of story would have, in my opinion, a much better grip on the reader's attention. Then again, I am unaware of webnovels, so I might be wrong.

    One thing much worth of praising is the attention to character which is placed into this piece. Lady Marea is truly a sight for sore eyes, a glimmer of life in an otherwise grim, lugubrious environment. And her personality has a sheen to it that makes it all the more realistic, marred by a veil of sadness as it is. And whilst the rest are not as equally explored as she is, for reasons I might not be able to comprehend, I can say with great certainty that she, alone, is enough to entice me. Congratulations are in order, then.

    I would suggest a minor brush over this prologue before the time is nigh. Smooth out the scales a bit. And with that, I believe I've spoken enough. Very nice, sad to see it underrated.

    Bubbles, out.

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    1
    The Heir of the Dragon
    The Heir of the Dragon
    Chapter:0


    Jul 30, 2021

    Hiho.

    I will keep my comment as double-edged as possible to greatly showcase my love-hate relationship with this chapter. Because as good as it does in establishing a context, it limps on the delivery.

    For one, the characters of David and Eris are perfectly grimdark. They encapsulate a fallen hero and the unavoidable evil that every story of this type needs. And the apparent senselessness of Eris' actions, the lack of raison d'etre of her decisions and her poignantly malevolent persona are sublimely captured within every aspect of her, from her physical allure to the frigid, unequivocally heartless tactics she employs. Truly, she is the matriarch of a story bound to be written in evil.

    However, David's character is wavering. The inner monologue he has with himself is convincing at first glance, but it unfortunately fails a more thorough investigation. Listing the situation, he has just been murdered, subjugated to the whim of someone he soon grows to learn is nigh omnipotent. The conflict he's being presented with is abandoning morality and he just...does it. It is born and resolved from the get-go.

    Naturally, I don't believe that. I am acutely aware that there will be instances where this dilemma will be reiterated and resumed. But from the looks of it, his relinquishing is weak. It's grief he should be going through, but he skips some stages, doesn't he? Particularly, one that I want to address: bargaining. When faced with an immovable fate, it is human to trade, to convince and to hope. He doesn't do that, does he? He denies, he gets angry at the methods, but then he just depressively agrees and moves on. There is no attempt at revolt, at changing the playing field. And that's why this execution, in my view, is lacking. If anything, someone so righteous that would've been willing to sacrifice himself for the nameless few would inadvertently think of a way out, a better one, wouldn't he? I find it hard to think that an inherently righteous soul would simply succumb, especially since he's combatted that very same notion earlier on and at no point did he let the 'dark thoughts' win... Alas, it's your story, you know best. But to me, this zealless acceptance lends me nothing but bitterness.

    I suppose that's it. Some stylistic mishaps here and there, particularly around repetition, some great imagery with the mist hands that squeaks here and there but is great nonetheless and that's it.

    Bubbles, out.

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    1
    The Children of Eris
    Chapter:2

    Why Kill? When Witches Can Be Tentacled!
    Chapter:5

    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho.

    Oof...Let's get into this.

    I feel like pairing this chapter with the prologue leaves me with a lot of unanswered questions. Mostly because I am consistently wondering how the hell does everything tie in. I've glimpsed at the next chapter and read through the previous one, but it all feels haphazard, messy from a purely organisational point of view. Funny, given that the two seem to work in a corporation.

    The dialogue, for the most part is kind of stilted, the whole scenario kind of contrived, but lovely in a very bizarre way. It's slowly building up to a resolution it's not unfair to assume from the get-go won't happen, which only adds to the odd tone of this entire chapter. I'm very unsure how to feel about the plot as a result...

    The narration is from the perspective of someone who seems very...hollow. I can't really get a feel of who she is, other than some kind of femme fatale whose entire spiel seems to be toying with men. Apart from this, it's mostly a very...hard to get behind episode, mostly because I can't for the life of me get behind what's going on here. The main character is very ambiguous in her action, rebuffing and beckoning this poor Ken fellow...It feels off in more ways than one.

    As for the grammar, it's been pointed out. No need to rehash it. If anything, I think my opinion is perfectly summarised by what everyone else has already said. I wish I could give my two cents but I don't even have the one...

    That's it.

    Bubbles, out.

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    1
    The Aftermath of the Magic Apocalypse
    Chapter:1


    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho.

    I'm going to keep this short, sweet and to the point.

    The plot is quite clearly the strongest part here, particularly through its situational comedy and absurdity, which is probably all that anime stands for. Over the top characters with motivations so obsessive that you can't really make rhyme or reason out of them; and the fact that they're real makes this all the more brilliant in its satire. It's quite an exquisite comic of character, put into perspective. And for that, I shall bid you my congratulations.

    The writing, unfortunately, is where somethings starts falling by the wayside. Slice of life demands a very tenuous balance between worldbuilding and actual idea building. The issue here is that this balance must be supported by a powerful style. And the weight you put on those puny words crushes them. Glossing over the little tense mishaps, we have very weak wording where something more amusing can be used. When something ridiculous happens it can only be strengthened if the world around it is equally ridiculous, otherwise it may appear as jarring. And the expositional paragraphs, they are much too abundant. For the most part this is a 'Who Needs Plot', but when a lot of the first half of the reveal is nothing but explanations upon explanations of things that are probably well-known or easy to infer from a couple words alone, it becomes tedious. You focused much too long on telling us about everything that you forgot to encapsulate the more important aspects of the whole scene. The erratic nature of the chase was lost, there was no bustling crowd in my view, just a passive mob, the brigade of hot dog vendors felt like a stale line, the applause a mute clapping and the atmosphere was tepid to put it lightly. Everything was just lukewarm, not at all telling of the true rambunctious nature of what a convention is supposed to be...

    I think that's enough from me.

    Bubbles, out. :3

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    0
    Generic cover concept
    I Work in the Anime Industry and Everybody Hates Me!
    Chapter:1

    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho.

    First of all, I must say that this concept is quite unique and I like it a lot. It reminds me a lot of 'In Time', particularly with this counter being etched somewhere on everyone's skin. And at the same time, the rest of the world gives off strong BNHA vibes, which I presume is a bit of an inspiration. Onto the actual elements of the story, now.

    The plot... squeaks. The pacing is all over the place, moments of exposition halting narration in a very stilted way. I understand it's first person, but the breaks are not warranted for the most part, the information we're being presented doesn't flow well from the last event we're being left with. A key issue with exposition is positioning, and I feel like you could do much better with sprinkling it one sentence at a time, instead of hauling off chunks of it. Or if anything, make these chunks warranted, like you did with the Karma number. As for the events... must we see them all? If anything, some of the scenes between breaks don't really serve much purpose. They feel a lot like filler, particularly because of the meaningless we're attributing to them. There isn't a reason for the bullying. Not a clear one for her being late either... The kendo practice is rather off-field and it ends much too abruptly. It's a messy composition overall, but it could be tidied up if it were held in neater, more telling events.

    The characters are definitely a strong point of this little piece here. For one, they are very human, owing it mostly to the YA style and the careful consideration to events. And whilst the whole gallery feels like the most cliched rehashing of every high school show or series ever, they do have an unique charm...if only I could see the bullies' numbers. Or the mum's. Or the sister's. If only this little gimmick would've been used more than to show a singular 12. Would've added a bit of paradoxical depth, wouldn't you say? Seeing some harlot with a karma score in the hundreds or thousands. Alas, it is what it is. Zeya is cute, though. I like her struggling self, but she can be a bit reactionary. Hardly anything proactive comes from her, save for a classic avoidant personality...

    As for the style, I mentioned one of its merits earlier. However, where it falls flat is during the narration. Most events are so succinct that you must wonder why are they even included. Especially since their purpose isn't to show anything about the character, advance the plot forward or describe anything. It feels like filler, and that can easily be avoided by having our first person perspective actually reflect on what happened. You did it right with Haru's notes, why not do it again with anything else? I'd love to see more of what Zeya thinks instead of the fodder of school life.

    I think that's it.

    Bubbles, out.

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    0
    Cover Karma
    Karma
    Chapter:1

    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho.

    What I can certainly praise here is the writing style and the attempts it's making. The bleak, almost grotesque wasteland reminds of a necromanced city, a simply, yet effective tool to revive even the most apathetic and ruined hellscapes with a bit of perverse life. The darkness is very vivid and apparent every time Takumi goes over it, incessantly so...

    The atmosphere becomes slightly repetitive at times. It's a lot of the same things being rehashed. I understand if we have a broad stroke at the beginning then details reignited afterwards, but here we have just different views of the same picture. Changing perspectives really doesn't change what I see that much... Not to mention, whilst the generalities are well-consigned, some of the specifics are lacking. It's hard for me to envision the street where the entire scene with Miyori's departure takes place, especially with all the filth and cells? I find it hard to picture it all.

    Character wise, Takumi is very well-crafted, with notable exceptions in the lack of apparent motivation, his actions being rather contradictory... But apart from that he shows a lot of traits that would categorise him as 'edgy' and 'misunderstood', but I like that he's shown in a way that doesn't muddle him with all the other members of the same coven. He is unique in his own, tiny nihilistic way and I enjoy him. A bit rough around the edges, but nice nonetheless.

    As for the surprise at the end...yeah, no. The plot was progressing nicely up until this absolute hammer drops from the sky in what I can only describe as a convoluted, cliched and corny way to rip Takumi from the 'Matrix'. Why then, why there, it doesn't serve a symbolic purpose. Why so suddenly, why no indication? What, the conversation with Takeshi was supposed to be our clue? Rather poor attempt at it... I could've envisioned this being anything but this; some form of attack, some revenge, some comeuppance, some discovery, but this... I can see the merit of the idea, but the execution really cheapens everything.

    I guess that's all I had to say.

    Bubbles, out. :3

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    1
    A Reverie for Another Eternity
    Chapter:0


    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho.

    I don't have an introduction, so let's go.

    I'm really struggling to get into this story and there are multiple reasons for that. Let's begin with the beginning. On the one hand, I can attribute some merit to it. It's trying to be something new and innovative with every new scene that gets added. The issue is that it reads precisely like a script beginning. Not the best way to start a book, the first sentence similar to (Interior, Night [...])...

    Another detractor is the dialogue, oh, lord the dialogue. There are several problems with it, most of it boiling down to how unnatural it all sounds. Every character just speaks in exposition and logic, they barely interact as a family should... Whenever they talk it's like they're trying to motivate what the other person says about them. Every line doesn't fulfill dialogue's foremost purpose, communication between characters, it's more like they're trying to speak with the express intent of transmitting information to the reader and reader alone. The elephant in the room aside, we are struck by walls upon walls of text with little tonal change or tagging, action or speech. Especially noteworthy when Damian speaks, he just goes on forever going through different emotions but at the end of the sentence all we receive is just an 'angry'. Try expanding this area a bit more. Add proper tagging, and read the whole thing aloud to test for normality. This really sinks the ship for me.

    As for the plot or characters, let's go over them briefly. There is hardly any hook in here. We'll see a confession maybe at the recital/show and that's it. But there is no real weight put behind this blow. Why should I be invested in it, what would happen if worse comes to worse? The characters don't seem to be really anything special, they are one note, so you can't rely on them for driving anything forward interest-wise. Alexa is the spunkiest one and I like her the most, but the rest are just your painfully average family. If anything, it's like the most normal family in the Midwest... I'm sorry, but there really isn't anything that particularly stands out to me...

    I think that should be enough.

    Bubbles, out.

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    1
    Cover Art
    Mischance: Love's Misery and Misfortune
    Chapter:0


    Jul 29, 2021

    Hiho!

    What a lovely little bit of prose we have here. Truly, truly masterful, dare I say. Let us jump into the analysis.

    Plot-wise I feel like this is an astounding beginning. It has a chorus, really, making the perspective feel all the more unique; 'in medias res', much like this particular bit of story doesn't begin as. Rather, it's doing a clever mise-en-abyme. Clever, clever indeed. The events portrayed are also put in an interesting parallel, the prologue reading precisely like an involuntary memory, Proustian in all its right, recalling the 'evanescent' moment of what could be easily considered the central, yet still corner, piece of the novel. Lovely, lovely.

    The characters are a bit broad-stroked for my taste. For the most part the 'Ice Queen' has its own rightfully brilliant juxtaposition. The cathartic effect of her writing is interesting. However, our Kohei-kun feels extremely reactionary in contrast. There isn't anything I get from his character apart from extremely vague swatches. His will to keep a journal and reminisce? His academic ineptitude? His awe at a beautiful girl? It's uniqueness through style, but not through character. The prologue alone cements a bit, but not the other. Observer main character, but a first person observer has to be marked by some personality. Alas, this falls short of it.

    As for the style, it's beautiful. It's particularly effective through its simplicity. Much unlike all the other LNs I've read. And even though I don't necessarily enjoy the lacking it imposes, I'm not going to dig on it for being what it is, since it's not bad. I guess some congratulations are in order, are they not?

    I think that's all I had to say.

    Bubbles, out. :3

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    1
    Cover
    Why I Write
    Chapter:0