12 Worldbuilding Details You Haven't Thought Of (+ sharing details from my fantasy project!)

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  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
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    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 - intro + foundational tips
    3:27 - lexical gaps
    4:21 - alcohol & substance use
    5:06 - relationship structures
    7:14 - sports & games
    8:13 - burial & death care
    9:01 - life phases
    10:05 - significance of animals
    11:00 - world structure
    12:06 - gender
    13:42 - calendar & weekly cycle
    14:14 - counter & subcultures
    15:18 - fan culture & cultural icons
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Komentáře • 66

  • @ChBrahm
    @ChBrahm Před 2 měsíci +19

    I´m currently reading "The Left Hand of Darkness" and its really interesting to see how Ursula LeGuin created an entire planet with all Intersex people there and how society build around that.
    Basically everyone is gender neutral until they find a partner then they develop sexual characteristics in order to procreate but then go back to being gender neutral.
    You can father one kid one time and the next you can give birth if you choose.
    A really fun moment was when talking to a person from off world (basically a regular dude) and they just find it too depraved that they/we are constantly in "sex mode" unable to turn of our sexual characteristics during times when they arent needed.

  • @AlexandraSRamsey
    @AlexandraSRamsey Před 2 měsíci +26

    3:30 I also can't remember if their lacking a word for thank you is in the book or was added in the show (I don't have a copy anymore or I'd check!) but it's actually a slightly iffy detail worldbuilding wise. From our cultural standpoint lacking a word for 'thank you' might imply that a culture does not care for manners or lacks civility, but actually cultures that lack a practice of thanking people tend to do so because favours or gifts do not imply debts (sometimes we say 'I am in your debt' as 'thank you') but are simply social obligations. Saying 'thank you' is offensive in such contexts as it implies the person did you a favour and is calculating a debt you owe, like a stranger or a merchant. Lacking words for 'please' and 'thank you' (or rather the practice of pleading and thanking) can actually be a feature of egalitarian cultures opposed to commercial values. It can also go the other way; you can't thank someone as if you might repay that debt. By being given a gift you can never repay you are now owned, like an infinite loan ('by gifts are slaves made')-gift giving can actually be a feature of hierarchy, and the practice of thanking someone a degrading recognition of having lost a game of competitive gifting, as opposed to a feature of manners or treating them well. If a character came from a culture like this, finding out their new friends lack a word for 'thank you' would be very comforting rather than scary
    So it can help to think not just about lexical gaps but about the cultural contexts that could completely change the nature of a word. Sometimes the words exist but are only used in ritual contexts (one only pleads with the gods) or with superiors (one only thanks the elders not one's friends). And how your own cultural perception of what dropping a word from a lexicon would mean might not be universal (which is why that scene with the 'they have no word for thank you' has always irritated me!-we might see failing to have a concept of thanks as failing to have a sense of equality, but that's a cultural quirk)

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +7

      Really interesting comment - thanks for such a great addition!

  • @wangtoriojackson4315
    @wangtoriojackson4315 Před 2 měsíci +75

    One piece of worldbuilding advice I've always liked is the assigning of endonyms and exonyms both to your place names. In the real world, what the citizens of a country call their country is different from what people in other countries in their own languages call that country. For instance, we here in the west say Japan, but in Japanese, it is Nippon. And we call it Germany, but Germans call it Deutschland. Too often in fantasy settings, countries and places have only one name that they are only known by throughout the entirety of the setting, whether it is a monoculture or many different cultures. And that can make the world seem flat and not convincing. Making up endonyms and exonyms and using them both can give a sense of well-roundedness and multiculturalism to your setting.

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +9

      This is a great tip!

    • @LOOY756
      @LOOY756 Před 2 měsíci +4

      That's one detail I think is often omitted just for readability, unless there's only a few named places. Remembering one set of fantasy nouns is hard enough lol.

    • @ticijevish
      @ticijevish Před 2 měsíci +5

      In most fantasy settings, you are dealing with Common, a nigh-universal language that everyone speaks, so it makes sense that there would only be one set of names for places and nations, since it's all one language.
      That said, giving places local or historic names is a great way to make them more believable. This works very well if a nation had been concquered in the past and had q new language and nomenclature thrust upon it. Post-liberation, the nation might outlaw such names, or the protagonist could be catching hands in a local tavern for using the wrong names unintentionally.

  • @andsgradite392
    @andsgradite392 Před 2 měsíci +16

    i once had an abandoned four elements magic system world where the funeral rites were--and i kid you not, VERBATIM--:
    if you were earth, you get buried. if you were fire, you get cremated. if you were air, you get yeeted into space. if you were water, you get yeeted into the ocean.

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +12

      you walked so avatar the last airbender could run

  • @jonbrouwer4300
    @jonbrouwer4300 Před 2 měsíci +15

    I sorta think of fantasy as history + the supernatural. Find a time and place in the world that you think is cool, then spice it up with whatever supernatural stuff you think is cool.
    For a long time, "Fantasy" was basically just medieval France + orcs and wizards. But that's just one time and place in history, and just one type of the supernatural. Try pre-Columbian Native America + Eldritch gods, or medieval Uzbekistan + ghosts, or whatever.

  • @Thegirlwiththebooks-
    @Thegirlwiththebooks- Před 2 měsíci +3

    In a book I wrote there was this burial rite in which the deceased gets chopped into pieces and laid on a cliff to be eaten by birds of prey (as a way to return their dead to nature) I believe they do this in real life too but I don’t remember which culture it was from. Loved the tip about burials (AND THE SOCIETY THATS BASED AROUND HAVING BESTIES DUDE I WANNA LIVE THERE)

  • @oneinathousand2156
    @oneinathousand2156 Před 2 měsíci +7

    One thing I’ve thought about is how news gets spread around in the setting. If there’s no modern postal service or internet, are there other ways messages could be spread besides the usual people on horseback with letters, town criers, etc. Do they have newspapers or something equivalent? If so, what’s the literacy rate of a given culture? What about fake news or gossip that gets out of hand?

  • @immortaljanus
    @immortaljanus Před 2 měsíci +25

    I had my main character use a funeral tradition to smuggle his friend out of captivity.

  • @kyhumphrey5247
    @kyhumphrey5247 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I actually made a list of sports that I thought would fit in a fantasy world, which I filled with options that I *believe* were present in pre-Colonial Era or pre-Industrial Revolution times
    Races
    * Mount Races (riding, chariots)
    * Foot Races
    * Rowing
    * Swimming
    * Animal Racing
    * Obstacle Courses
    * Landsailing
    Combat Sports
    * Gladiator Matches
    * Naumachia (staged naval combat)
    * Fisherman's Joust
    * Pasola (mounted spear fighting)
    * Jousting
    * Animal Wrestling
    * [Mixed] Martial Arts
    * Boxing/Kickboxing
    * Wrestling
    * Shin Kicking
    * Pankration (Boxing + Kicking + Wrestling)
    * Stick Fighting
    Ball Sports
    * Handball
    * Football (non-American)
    * Hockey
    * Bowling
    * Stoolball
    * Lacrosse
    * Lawn Bowls
    * Cricket
    Boardsports
    * Surfing
    * Windsurfing
    * Riverboarding
    * River Surfing
    * Snowboarding
    * Sandboarding
    * Bodyboarding/Bellyboarding
    * Skysurfing (transported via flying creature or airship)
    Olympics/Multi-Sport Events
    * Tug of War
    * Archery
    * Javelin Throwing
    * Jumping
    * Weightlifting
    * Shooting
    * Vaulting
    * Disc Throwing
    Animal Sports
    * Show Jumping
    * Animal Roping
    * Mount Archery
    * Tent Pegging
    Illegal/Cruel Blood Sports
    * Venatio (people vs animals)
    * Combat Sports to the death (most notably Gladiator Fights, Naumachia, Pasola, or Fisherman's Joust)
    * Animal Tossing/Pulling/Throwing
    * Animal Baiting (pitting animals of one species against animals of another species)
    * Sport/Trophy Hunting
    * Animal Fighting (animals of the same species fight each other)

  • @absolutelycitron1580
    @absolutelycitron1580 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Aaah I love the fandom idea! Another neglected detail imo is too many fantasy worlds are earth like planets with single moons that orbit g-type stars. I know old school sun and moon magic is fun but we have so many other beautiful celestial bodies and scenarios to work with.

  • @vanessaglau1797
    @vanessaglau1797 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I love all of this but especially the fan culture bit! It makes me think of how popular kabuki theatre actors in 16th-17th century Japan had this whole fan culture & merch business going on around them--people sold painted pictures of them but also beauty products, hand fans etc. They were even fashion trendsetters. Proof that crazy pop culture iconism can exist even before mass media!

  • @ArtAnimeEmerly
    @ArtAnimeEmerly Před 2 měsíci +2

    This video has given me a great idea about how job roles can change and that creates a new stage of life for my characters, thank you!

  • @crow2616
    @crow2616 Před 2 měsíci +9

    In my original world, which is just an alternate version of this one with magic and stuff, a specific kind of magical beings have a tradition that when someone has lost a parent, they dye a part of their hair red for the initial grieving process, usually a year. My main character has kept her red streak for over six years.

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +3

      What a cool way to show your character's emotional state through worldbuilding!!

    • @crow2616
      @crow2616 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@ShaelinWrites Tysm!! ✨😊

  • @johnnyb.5281
    @johnnyb.5281 Před 2 měsíci +2

    @4:00
    Like the dry landers of the Wheel of Time not having a word for the words Bridge or Raft.

  • @shrubberry
    @shrubberry Před 2 měsíci +3

    banger video as always shaelin! i was wondering if you could potentially do a video on how you would approach discovery writing a fantasy book? i want to work on something fantasy related for my next project, but it feels like a genre catered towards to outliners and i feel a bit lost about how i would discovery write it. your discovery writer tips have always been incredibly helpful for me, so i was curious to hear your take!

  • @writethepath8354
    @writethepath8354 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Worldbuilding detail I like and don't know if enough people use: the materials things are made with and where they came from. Glass, wool, cedar, limestone, I really like that detailing

  • @projoepat
    @projoepat Před 2 měsíci +3

    I’ve been watching a lot of your videos over the last few months along with a lot of other channels/podcasts/books trying to understand the craft before I try my own hand at it.
    I just wanted to let you know how wonderful of a teacher you are. You’re very nuanced! Which I’ve noticed is probably the most important thing when teaching this stuff. So thank you!! 🙏

  • @AdamFishkin
    @AdamFishkin Před 2 měsíci +3

    Tips 2 and 3 returned my mind immediately to Dune and how, to put it mildly, Frank Herbert tried harder.
    Tip 5 gave me deja vu, and then I realized I was trying to solve a problem 7 or 8 years ago with a fantasy concept that involved death, and missed the most obvious solution: explain how they're buried. So thank you Shaelin. I might return to that project now.
    Tip 7 is a fun one. I wrote one play (a musical) where a town worships bees. If that show is ever produced, the punchline of *why* they worship bees will be one of the funniest reveals I've ever done.
    Tip 10 made my brain explode. The reasons you gave for it being your least favorite thing to deal with, and noticeably spent the least amount of time on here, are the same reasons that typical overthinking me is about to make myself very sad.
    Anyhow ...... pre-emptive happy St. Patrick Day.

  • @e-t-y237
    @e-t-y237 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Wow ... an immediate live idea from each one.

  • @user-ny5fy2zz5c
    @user-ny5fy2zz5c Před 2 měsíci +3

    "You can do really really interesting stuff with burial." Shaelin Bishop, 2024

  • @hyleore
    @hyleore Před 2 měsíci +1

    I agree that dealing with the calendar is The Worst. Before my first draft I thought 'okay, I can just not mention time at all, and I won't have to deal with it'... but that's actually impossible to achieve. I ended up using our weekly cycle because I _needed_ to keep track of what happened when, but for my next draft I need to figure it out 😩

  • @BKPrice
    @BKPrice Před 2 měsíci +3

    I'm writing a story of two fans of a famous author who get caught up in an adventure due to the author's celebrity meet and greet in a tavern.

  • @o_o-lj1ym
    @o_o-lj1ym Před 2 měsíci +1

    The fan culture icon thing is such a good point

  • @SoupHiyori
    @SoupHiyori Před 2 měsíci +1

    One thing I don't see enough is different dialects for languages. I live on an island with a vastly different dialect than the main country, to the point where mainlanders can't understand a lot of what we say. It's interesting to think about what caused this distortion of the language, as often it's a result of two cultures mixing because of a shared space :)

  • @wespenre3418
    @wespenre3418 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Some great ideas in this video, Shaelin! Thanks a lot!

  • @andromedasignage
    @andromedasignage Před 2 měsíci +2

    another banger from shaelin

  • @helloelin
    @helloelin Před 2 měsíci +1

    I love your videos, always insightful and inspiring!

  • @brockkelly4841
    @brockkelly4841 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I’m reminded by the second point meat bees, the village of the frozen tundra having mead, therefore honey, therefore bees, but the bees feed on decaying meat instead of flowers.

  • @mom2many166
    @mom2many166 Před 2 měsíci +1

    These are great things to think about. I am thinking of all the fun texture some of these Ideas could give my work. Thanks!

  • @verityxenia7840
    @verityxenia7840 Před 2 měsíci +1

    omg perfect video for me right now! Thank you!!

  • @olivia-dv7zm
    @olivia-dv7zm Před 2 měsíci +1

    oh my god i REALLY want to read your book. i love to read non-fiction books about the nuclear family and other alternatives (i think that's a general obsession with people of the ace spectrum) and i would LOVE to read a fantasy book that explores that (i also have a fantasy book that subverts that but it's reeeeally far away from being done lol). when you publish it (if you intend to publish it) please share it with us!

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci

      I really hope to publish my fantasy work! The book I'm currently writing doesn't explore that facet of the worldbuilding too closely but a future book I want to write in the same world does! It's one of my favourite cultures in the world since the inspiration was basically 'what if we had witch covens instead of families' lol

  • @Cat-pg1ws
    @Cat-pg1ws Před měsícem

    Etiquette, faux pas, and taboos are also super interesting. And I don't necessarily mean etiquette as the stereotypical finishing school "if one is stirring tea or coffee then one should do it back and forth rather than circular, and if one is eating soup one should push the spoon away, rather than toward, the self" and all that jazz. I mean more like, like not commenting on someone's weight, or not giving criticism on ao3 (even if it's "constructive") unless specifically asked, the ethics (or lack thereof) of "back butting," taking off shoes in someone's home, or even the back and forth of offering and refusing gifts
    like, how people differentiate between "rude and barbaric" and "proper and normal" can imply a lot of things about a culture

  • @hyleore
    @hyleore Před 2 měsíci +1

    To an extent, in the European Middle Ages, fandom was very much related to religion, so its absence in high fantasy might be because people are not thinking of it in that way if they're creating a medieval-inspired world. People were fans of Jesus, but also of saints or pseudo-saints, mystics, preachers, writers; they would travel miles to talk to a certain anchorite or go on pilgrimage to visit the tomb of a famous saint. Even when people create a medieval world, I agree that this aspect is often lacking: religion might influence beliefs very strongly, but not create communities and icons, little fan cultures, in that way. And of course fandom can happen in other ways even in medieval fantasy, but that got me thinking of it: if you create a world with an important religion, if that religion is foundamental to society and how people perceive the world, then it can give rise to icons and fandom - after all, the very world 'icon' and 'fan' (fanatic) originally have religious undertones.

  • @zigaudrey
    @zigaudrey Před 2 měsíci +2

    In Worldbuilding, I am adding how the region is seen by others, like stereotype and cliché. Does this add depth?

  • @dogbreath4000
    @dogbreath4000 Před 2 měsíci +3

    okay, PAUSE. the basin world structure idea is BEAUTIFUL.

    • @ticijevish
      @ticijevish Před 2 měsíci +1

      It is lovely, but it does imply the culture that holds this belief to be a bit on the...unobservant side.
      IRL, the ancient Greeks and their contemporaries figured out the planet was round by observing the stars they used for maritime navigation. They noticed the North star, Polaris, dipping down towards the horizon the further south they went, and rising higher in the night sky as they went north. This led them to conclude the world was round. If your culture has a belief in a concave world, this also implies they do not travel, their stargazing is not fueled by curiosity, and that critical thought and logic are not highly regarded among them.
      Since it's a lovely idea, I would suggest placing a ring of high mountains around their realm, so they would not go travelling long distances, especially by sea.

    • @dogbreath4000
      @dogbreath4000 Před 2 měsíci

      @ticijevish True, but I figured it could be an abstract belief in an "all roads lead to Rome" kind of way. Could be a belief in an etheric basin instead of a physical one, yaknow?

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +3

      This culture doesn't travel by sea and is surrounded by mountains! The belief is pretty ancient and originated during a time before they knew there was a world beyond their own lands (so like many thousands of years before the story) so now it's more a piece of folklore or a figurative term used to explain their ideas of fate and destiny more than a literal belief like it used to be.

    • @ShaelinWrites
      @ShaelinWrites  Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yes it's more abstract than literal essentially!

  • @Exayevie
    @Exayevie Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hi Shaelin, I have an off-topic question I'm dying to hear your thoughts on. I have been loving so many Canadian lit fic writers lately, and it seems like a ton of my favorites are coming out of BC specifically. I know the area has a long literary history, but as an American, I'm only discovering it now. Still, I can't help but feel like it's in a bit of a golden age - and I'm wondering if you have any thoughts on that, as someone much more personally connected to that scene. Can you give me a crash course on BC literature? Is there a lot of local pride around writing?

  • @LiteraryStoner
    @LiteraryStoner Před 2 měsíci +2

    Gets to gender - not me being queer and trans over here 😂guilty as charged lol.
    These are wonderful ideas! And i'm working on the rough draft of a fantasy novel (i'm about 8k in, not that far yet and it's going to be my first novel) and I think these ideas will really help flesh it out! I had to keep going back because my mind wondered onto my story and I realized I hadn't heard what you'd said lol. And had to stop to take notes.

  • @writethepath8354
    @writethepath8354 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Tamora Pierce was my first worldbuilding goddess

  • @CircusStellaShow
    @CircusStellaShow Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great tips, thank you! I submitted curses and I would love to know everyone else's made up curse words too!!

  • @aydenisive
    @aydenisive Před měsícem

    A question i like looking at is does your society have an infrastructure for orphans and the homeless? Or does it simply not occur?

  • @jermainerucker2027
    @jermainerucker2027 Před 14 dny

    World building has never even an issue for me

  • @immagns
    @immagns Před 2 měsíci +1

    6:15 is a segment sponsored by the Big Lesbian PolyculeTM

  • @absolutelycitron1580
    @absolutelycitron1580 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Queer!!!!! You call me queer?!?!?!?!?!?
    It's true lol

  • @guardianfish7718
    @guardianfish7718 Před 2 měsíci

    Important animals! In my story there are more breeds of cattle than breeds of dogs. Dairy, meat, plowing - of course. Wool? Yes! There are cows with rough, thick hair and ones with silky, smooth hair. There are breeds for pulling carriages and traveling, there are even racing cattle that run as fast as horses would.
    Why? Because many other animals that usually fit those niches simply don't exist. For example, the angel that was tasked with the creation of horses died before he made them and noone could decipher the blueprints of this crazy animal, so they took a cow and changed it to fit the description as best as possible. The blueprints for goats were lost in the war. God never even issued the ones for sheep, before he gave up and left. So cattle took over the world and diversified into almost every ungulate ecological niche.

  • @sarahumlaut
    @sarahumlaut Před 2 měsíci

    ALE 👹 MEAD 👺

  • @Mxmilox
    @Mxmilox Před 22 dny

    😂 Don’t call me out on the gender concepts! You def know your audience

  • @prairiebutch
    @prairiebutch Před 2 měsíci +7

    some of the greatest worldbuilding i’ve read that touches on a lot of these ideas is in the Baru Cormorant books! The author studied social neuroscience and race and has built up a lot of contexts in the series from that knowledge.

  • @brockkelly4841
    @brockkelly4841 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I’m reminded by the second point meat bees, the village of the frozen tundra having mead, therefore honey, therefore bees, but the bees feed on decaying meat instead of flowers.