Increasingly in my game, which I always bloody refer to if you've seen me in discussions before, Wolf Manor, I'm concerning myself with how the thread as a whole appears to a hypothetical audience. I know that such an audience probably doesn't exist, but that's how I'm approaching games I'm in.
An audience that reads just a given IC thread is typically faced with minimum one narrator and minimum one protagonist and, generally speaking, a complete mess to try to read; given the communal nature of pbp, there's typically only a certain amount of planning, and even that is more general plot-stuff, and not how the IC would be read as a whole.
That's not even mentioning different approaches to the medium, which can encompass varying writing styles (tenses and paradigms), varying presentation styles (use of off-site links, multimedia, and colour), and varying levels of IC-ness (ie; using OoC notes in the IC).
I think broadly speaking, people are aware of most of these factors, but without thinking about them. I can well imagine (and have seen and have been myself) a GM that requests players write in conventional style (3rd person past tense), presumably to conserve the convention of presentation and so the whole IC doesn't feel too jolting.
Do other people think about this sort of stuff?
To what degree do - and should - GM's consider the IC thread's content as an entire (if incomplete) work of art and seek to influence the writing of the participants with that in mind?
An audience that reads just a given IC thread is typically faced with minimum one narrator and minimum one protagonist and, generally speaking, a complete mess to try to read; given the communal nature of pbp, there's typically only a certain amount of planning, and even that is more general plot-stuff, and not how the IC would be read as a whole.
That's not even mentioning different approaches to the medium, which can encompass varying writing styles (tenses and paradigms), varying presentation styles (use of off-site links, multimedia, and colour), and varying levels of IC-ness (ie; using OoC notes in the IC).
I think broadly speaking, people are aware of most of these factors, but without thinking about them. I can well imagine (and have seen and have been myself) a GM that requests players write in conventional style (3rd person past tense), presumably to conserve the convention of presentation and so the whole IC doesn't feel too jolting.
Do other people think about this sort of stuff?
To what degree do - and should - GM's consider the IC thread's content as an entire (if incomplete) work of art and seek to influence the writing of the participants with that in mind?