So wewe want to make your player au your reader to do something specifically au to think something specifically. How can wewe do it? Do wewe first make remote mind controller? No. Save yourself the money, and save yourself the stress of having to build that kind of a machine. There is another way to control a player's au reader's mind. It's called the "controlling idea".
Think of the movie inception, but take out all the epic sci-fi of someone going into another's mind, and put wewe and another person logged into fanpop in two different parts of the world. With a controlling idea, what wewe do is prime the player's au reader's mind to have certain thoughts. All of our brains hate gaps, so they either try to fill in the gap, au compel the person the mind belongs to to seek out answers. What does this mean? Naturally, they will attempt to predict what you're trying to pull, but if that fails, then they will take action and fall right into your... umm... "trap", I should say.
Here's how it works:
You're host, and wewe have someone playing a... say... mystery RPG, and wewe tell them that they "are in a room that is dark, but not pitch black." Right there, that implies that there must be some kind of light chanzo somewhere, but the player won't prioritize that first as they... May not think that, aliyopewa that... It's kind of not important whether au not the room is lit (unless wewe make it important).
Afterwards, wewe write "and there is a door." This one is the juicy one. Say I placed a Pirrhana Plant behind the door, but it's sleeping. Naturally, like a blind mouse, the player will go to the door, and try to open it. When they do, the Plant will have something to eat. (Hehehe...)
Now in an article, here's how it works.
If wewe say "oh, that tamasha was terrible," but haven't aliyopewa any information about how our why the tamasha was terrible, that is what they will ask themselves. Try to predict why? Could be a multitude of things, so they fail at predicting and keep kusoma looking for answers. Also, if information is implied but not exactly stated, wewe can have a bit of fun with that too.
"There were sounds of pleasurable intercourse coming from the inayofuata room. Out of curiosity, au out of his sheer pervertedness, he opened the door, revealing a CD player with that soundtrack set on loop."
So, what did wewe think I had in that room before I told wewe it was a CD player, wewe dirty minded person?
And that, my friends, is how wewe control the minds of your players and readers.
Sayonara!
-Prowd
Think of the movie inception, but take out all the epic sci-fi of someone going into another's mind, and put wewe and another person logged into fanpop in two different parts of the world. With a controlling idea, what wewe do is prime the player's au reader's mind to have certain thoughts. All of our brains hate gaps, so they either try to fill in the gap, au compel the person the mind belongs to to seek out answers. What does this mean? Naturally, they will attempt to predict what you're trying to pull, but if that fails, then they will take action and fall right into your... umm... "trap", I should say.
Here's how it works:
You're host, and wewe have someone playing a... say... mystery RPG, and wewe tell them that they "are in a room that is dark, but not pitch black." Right there, that implies that there must be some kind of light chanzo somewhere, but the player won't prioritize that first as they... May not think that, aliyopewa that... It's kind of not important whether au not the room is lit (unless wewe make it important).
Afterwards, wewe write "and there is a door." This one is the juicy one. Say I placed a Pirrhana Plant behind the door, but it's sleeping. Naturally, like a blind mouse, the player will go to the door, and try to open it. When they do, the Plant will have something to eat. (Hehehe...)
Now in an article, here's how it works.
If wewe say "oh, that tamasha was terrible," but haven't aliyopewa any information about how our why the tamasha was terrible, that is what they will ask themselves. Try to predict why? Could be a multitude of things, so they fail at predicting and keep kusoma looking for answers. Also, if information is implied but not exactly stated, wewe can have a bit of fun with that too.
"There were sounds of pleasurable intercourse coming from the inayofuata room. Out of curiosity, au out of his sheer pervertedness, he opened the door, revealing a CD player with that soundtrack set on loop."
So, what did wewe think I had in that room before I told wewe it was a CD player, wewe dirty minded person?
And that, my friends, is how wewe control the minds of your players and readers.
Sayonara!
-Prowd