Do You Really Really Know Your Villain?

528
Image by Markéta Boušková from Pixabay

In a post on the SFWA blog, writer Michael Moore (not that one), says that SF writers can create stronger villains by thinking like a horror writer. He suggests the 3 Reals of Good Bad Guys:

  1. Make your antagonist Real. “You don’t have to describe every crack in his pinky-nail, but a few cleverly placed details will give him flesh,” Moore writes.
  2. Make your antagonist Really Menacing. In addition to threatening the world (or whatever goal they seek), the villain should specifically menace your protagonist, whether physically or mentally.
  3. Really know your antagonist. “Know what your antagonist wants, why he wants it, and what he’s willing to do to get it,” Moore says. “Moreover, if your hero is a part of you, and your antagonist is a projection of your hero’s worst nightmares, then it follows that the antagonist is also a part of you.”