Out of Character: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* Perhaps he is applying his own [[Alternate Character Interpretation]] to them (of which, both [[Possession Sue]], [[Ho Yay]], [[Foe Yay]], and [[Die for Our Ship]] contributes towards).
* Perhaps he is applying his own [[Alternate Character Interpretation]] to them (of which, both [[Possession Sue]], [[Ho Yay]], [[Foe Yay]], and [[Die for Our Ship]] contributes towards).
* Perhaps he's just writing a [[Transplanted Character Fic]]. Regardless, it's usually frowned upon to post stuff not labeled as such, with the term becoming quite negative if it gets applied to a story by other people.
* Perhaps he's just writing a [[Transplanted Character Fic]]. Regardless, it's usually frowned upon to post stuff not labeled as such, with the term becoming quite negative if it gets applied to a story by other people.
* If the [[Fanfic]] is [[Sturgeon's Law|of the 10%]], this is likely because [[OOC Is Serious Business|something in the story's backstory or plotline made them act this way]].
* If the [[Fanfic]] is [[Sturgeon's Law|of the 10%]], this is likely because [[Out-of-Character is Serious Business|something in the story's backstory or plotline made them act this way]].


Generally viewed as a very negative trait (if a fanfic gets [[Characterization Tags|tagged]] as "OOC", it's usually not a good sign, though writers will often be honest enough to slap the tag on themselves up front).
Generally viewed as a very negative trait (if a fanfic gets [[Characterization Tags|tagged]] as "OOC", it's usually not a good sign, though writers will often be honest enough to slap the tag on themselves up front).

Revision as of 03:28, 16 December 2018

A Sub-Trope of Canon Defilement.

In Derivative Works (especially Fan Fiction), this term means that somebody is acting largely against his or her established personality. How and why this occurs has a pretty wide range:

Generally viewed as a very negative trait (if a fanfic gets tagged as "OOC", it's usually not a good sign, though writers will often be honest enough to slap the tag on themselves up front).

Compare Character Derailment, which is this applied to canon. See also Out-of-Character Moment. Draco in Leather Pants, Ron the Death Eater and Wimpification can be considered subtropes.

Not to be confused with In and Out of Character. In Role-Playing Games, it is sometimes necessary to make a distinction between when a player is In Character and Out Of Character, to know if the person is speaking as the character or as the player. A player who uses Out of Character information (such as the presence of goblins in a room ahead) to make an in-character choice is said to be MetaGaming, which most dungeon-masters severely frown upon.