screen_irl

Furry memes for the fur in u ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Fried, Buttered and Salted.

Want memes but you're a degenerate? You’ve come to the right place! Come laugh at cropped yiff memes and knot jokes with your fellow furries.
A Wolf-Tato, straight from the fryer 🍟

For All Stuff Fluff!
Furry🥔IRL

Furry memes for the fur in u ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Does anyone know what glaze they used? Artist Tommy Zen
Delivering emotional intensity in your dialogue. Let your words carry the emotion, not dialogue tags (ie. sobbed, screeched, etc)
Welcome to KeepWriting. We are a community dedicated to motivating writers to stay consistent and constantly grow their craft. Whether you're looking to get feedback on an idea, hear a critique, or get unstuck in a story, this is the right place.
Delivering emotional intensity in your dialogue. Let your words carry the emotion, not dialogue tags (ie. sobbed, screeched, etc)
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
Stanford's "How to tell a story." The breakdown of story elements, and the purpose of each element.
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
Spaceships Galore: the ultimate guide to spaceships for the sci-fi fan.

A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
Hey Plotters, here's a 12 step outline process that M. Snodgrass (Author and Star Trek script scribe) uses. The question she always asks before starting is "What is the theme of this book?"
Welcome to KeepWriting. We are a community dedicated to motivating writers to stay consistent and constantly grow their craft. Whether you're looking to get feedback on an idea, hear a critique, or get unstuck in a story, this is the right place.
Hey Plotters, here's a 12 step outline process that M. Snodgrass (Author and Star Trek script scribe) uses. The question she always asks before starting is "What is the theme of this book?"
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
A cool guide on when to use passive vs active voice.
Picture based reference guides for anything and everything. If it seems like something someone might print, physically post, and reference then it is a good link for this sub. Remember: Infographics are learning tools, guides are reference tools. Sometimes it's grey.
The Million Dollar Question: When is Passive Voice Ok to Use?
The Million Dollar Question: When is Passive Voice Ok to Use?
Please don't spam us.
The Million Dollar Question: When is Passive Voice Ok to Use?

A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
What kind of writing resources are you interested in learning about?
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
New Authors, if you don't know how to start your story, why not try the Pixar Method.
A community for new authors to come together and share their work, thoughts, ideas, and stories! Most communities in the Reddit writing world are pretty strict about what you can & can't post, so we figured we’d just make one where - unless it’s spammy, abusive or abuse glorification - things could just be pretty chill. If you’re looking for a place to share plots, bounce ideas, world build, self-promote, or anything else go ahead and join. If something's wrong, please PM a mod!
If you don't know how to start your story, Here's Pixar Scriptwriters breakdown on How to Create Beginnings that Set Your Story Up for Success.
Welcome to KeepWriting. We are a community dedicated to motivating writers to stay consistent and constantly grow their craft. Whether you're looking to get feedback on an idea, hear a critique, or get unstuck in a story, this is the right place.
What I learned at Pixar: How to Create Beginnings that Set Your Story Up for Success.
If you're writing fiction, whether it be flash fiction, short stories, novellas, novel, epics, screenplays, poetry, or even something like writing for a videogame then this subreddit is for you. Join us, ask your questions, share your knowledge, and use us to have a look at your work.
What I learned at Pixar: How to Create Beginnings that Set Your Story Up for Success.
Get writing advice, share writing for critique, and talk about writing. Everyone is welcome. Join our discord: https://discord.gg/nn7cUSKxn3
What I learned at Pixar: How to Create Beginnings that Set Your Story Up for Success.
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)
Which Laser weapon would you have on your ship? Here's a breakdown of Lasers and particle beam weapons + some cool facts.
We are a community for writers of science fiction! We are here to discuss, critique, and share our stories.
The science behind Sci-Fi: From energy weapons to anti-matter fuel to FTL starships, this is everything you need to know about writing hard sci-fi.
This sub is dedicated to writing original science fiction with an eye towards publishing/self-publishing, be that print, ebook, video game, stage or screen. Discussions of craft, marketing, business, career development and planning are all welcome.
The science behind Sci-Fi: From energy weapons to anti-matter fuel to FTL starships, this is everything you need to know about writing hard sci-fi.
Let's design some spaceships and terraform some planets!
The science behind Sci-Fi: From energy weapons to anti-matter fuel to FTL starships, this is everything you need to know about writing hard sci-fi.
A database of writing resources. Feel free to submit your favorite resources, and discuss any of the posted links. (No questions, memes, or low-effort content please!)