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An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/xoykDFxJFBgF02W_HRnEzw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Reality bends to the will of the user via writing. Anything they write will come true.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Narration
rdfs:comment
  • Reality bends to the will of the user via writing. Anything they write will come true.
  • Narration means describe fictional events. In an RPG, this process is divided among the players. Each player is granted some authorial privilege to describe in-game events. In a traditional structure, the GM is given ultimately authority. While resolution determines how and whether something occurs in response to a meaningful choice, narration describes the event in imaginary terms.
  • The ability allows Ashleigh to manipulate reality by writing down what she wants to change or occur. The writing is essential, and therefore the ability can be blocked by preventing writing. However, any form of surface and writing implement can be used, such as pen, pencil, chalk or even blood. The words fade away when reality is manipulated, showing that the ability has worked. If the words do not fade, this means that the ability has for some reason failed, for example if it was blocked. When the ability is used, Ashleigh must be clear in what she writes. For example, when she first manifested this ability, she had written "the jackets are in the living room", meaning to bring down a single jacket for every member of her family, but accidentally she manipulated reality into moving all o
  • Narration is the use of a written or spoken commentary to convey a story to an audience. Narration encompasses a set of techniques through which the creator of the story presents their story, including: * Narrative point of view: the perspective (or type of personal or non-personal "lens") through which a story is communicated * Narrative voice: the format (or type presentational form) through which a story is communicated * Narrative time: the grammatical placement of the story's time-frame in the past, the present, or the future
  • Point of view: A Narrator's position in relation to the story being told created by the author of the stories and series and a Narrator delivers the key points of views of a story and is by capable of having a single or more narrators that that can be accurate or inaccurate.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
Row 1 info
  • Manipulate reality via writing.
Row 1 title
  • Power/Ability to:
ability to
  • alter reality by writing
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Box Title
  • Narration
Characters
  • Ashleigh Calwin Noah Gray Abbie Gray Peter Petrelli World 2 Isaac Petrelli-Parkman
Name
  • Narration
Caption
  • Altering reality with words
  • Drosselmeyer
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imagewidth
  • 360(xsd:integer)
BGCOLOR
  • #353839
abstract
  • Reality bends to the will of the user via writing. Anything they write will come true.
  • Narration is the use of a written or spoken commentary to convey a story to an audience. Narration encompasses a set of techniques through which the creator of the story presents their story, including: * Narrative point of view: the perspective (or type of personal or non-personal "lens") through which a story is communicated * Narrative voice: the format (or type presentational form) through which a story is communicated * Narrative time: the grammatical placement of the story's time-frame in the past, the present, or the future A narrator is a personal character or a non-personal voice that the creator (author) of the story develops to deliver information to the audience, particularly about the plot. The narrator may be a voice devised by the author as an anonymous, non-personal, or stand-alone entity; as the author herself/himself as a character; or as some other fictional or non-fictional character appearing and participating within their own story. The narrator is considered participant if he/she is a character within the story, and non-participant if he/she is an implied character or an omniscient or semi-omniscient being or voice that merely relates the story to the audience without being involved in the actual events. Some stories have multiple narrators to illustrate the storylines of various characters at the same, similar, or different times, thus allowing a more complex, non-singular point of view. Narration encompasses not only who tells the story, but also how the story is told (for example, by using stream of consciousness or unreliable narration). In traditional literary narratives (such as novels, short stories, and memoirs), narration is a required story element; in other types of (chiefly non-literary) narratives, such as plays, television shows, video games, and films, narration is merely optional.
  • Point of view: A Narrator's position in relation to the story being told created by the author of the stories and series and a Narrator delivers the key points of views of a story and is by capable of having a single or more narrators that that can be accurate or inaccurate. * Omniscient Narrator (All Knowing): Omniscient Narrators has access to all the actions,thoughts,settings,locations, and events within the fictional settings and shouldn't get anything wrong. * 1st person Narrator: A first person Narrator will use the pronoun "I" to tell the story, and can be either a major or minor character within the series or story. It may be easier for a reader to relate to a story told in a first person account. * 2nd person Narrator: A second person narrator uses the pronoun "you" and is not used very often since it makes the reader a participant in the story not everything a 2nd person narrator states is accurate. (And a reader may be reluctant to be in the very actions!) * 3rd person Narrator: A third person narrator uses the pronoun "he" or "she" and does not take part in the story at all making them entirely unreliable. * Subjective Narrator: A Subjective narrator is generally a unreliable source because he/she is in the story, and can only speak to his/her experience within it. * Objective Narrator (Observer): A Objective Narrator describes or interprets thoughts, feelings, motivations, of the characters. (Details such as setting, scenes, and what was said is stronger with an objective observer.) * Limited Narrator: A limited Narrator has a restricted view of events,thoughts,settings and actions and doesn't "know" the whole story making them entirely unreliable to whats actually is happening.
  • Narration means describe fictional events. In an RPG, this process is divided among the players. Each player is granted some authorial privilege to describe in-game events. In a traditional structure, the GM is given ultimately authority. While resolution determines how and whether something occurs in response to a meaningful choice, narration describes the event in imaginary terms.
  • The ability allows Ashleigh to manipulate reality by writing down what she wants to change or occur. The writing is essential, and therefore the ability can be blocked by preventing writing. However, any form of surface and writing implement can be used, such as pen, pencil, chalk or even blood. The words fade away when reality is manipulated, showing that the ability has worked. If the words do not fade, this means that the ability has for some reason failed, for example if it was blocked. When the ability is used, Ashleigh must be clear in what she writes. For example, when she first manifested this ability, she had written "the jackets are in the living room", meaning to bring down a single jacket for every member of her family, but accidentally she manipulated reality into moving all of the jackets in the house into the living room. To date, Ashleigh has found nothing she cannot alter using this ability. She has however found difficulties with this ability as she has not yet learned how to deactivate it and write something without affecting reality. It is unknown if she will be able to do this in future.
is Abilities of
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