Hi bob
Since I’m a normal person and this idea would not leave my head, I spend the whole afternoon making a Shrek’s world map with all the places we see in the full Shrek’s franchise (including Puss in Boots spinoffs)
It’s obviously derivative from our world. I tried to make it make sense between what the places look like in the movies and the travelling the characters seems to be doing between each places.
The places Shrek goes to looks like western europe/USA inspired, while Puss in Boots movies and series looks like a mix between Spain, south of US, and Mexico, so I tried to blend all the inspirations.
Feel free to comment of stuff that doesn’t make sense or I might have missed.
Chapters: 4/4 Fandom: Puss in Boots (DreamWorks Movies), The Adventures of Puss in Boots (Cartoon) Rating: General Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Puss in Boots (Shrek) & Toby (The Adventures of Puss in Boots), Perrito (Puss in Boots: The Last Wish) & Kitty Softpaws (Puss in Boots) & Puss in Boots (Shrek) Characters: Puss in Boots (Shrek), Kitty Softpaws (Puss in Boots), Toby (The Adventures of Puss in Boots), Perrito (Puss in Boots: The Last Wish) Additional Tags: Light Angst, team friendship, Mild Hurt/Comfort, Memory Loss, Memory Related, Therapy Dog Perrito (Puss in Boots: The Last Wish), Puss in Boots Needs a Hug (Shrek) Series: Part 3 of Forgotten Memories Summary:
After wandering off from Puss and Kitty, Perrito meets an old friend of Puss.
Time to post this!
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Maintain clarity: Ensure that the action is easy to follow by using clear and concise language. Avoid overly complicated sentences or excessive description that could confuse readers.
Focus on emotions: Show the emotional impact of the fight on your characters. Describe their fear, anger, determination, or adrenaline rush to make the scene more compelling and relatable.
Include strategic elements: Incorporate tactics, strategy, and improvisation into the fight to make it more dynamic and realistic. Think about how your characters use their surroundings, weapons, or special abilities to gain an advantage.
Balance dialogue and action: Intersperse dialogue with action to break up the fight scene and provide insight into the characters' thoughts and intentions. Dialogue can also reveal or support the characters' personalities and motivations.
Keep it concise: While it's important to provide enough detail to immerse readers in the action, avoid unnecessary padding or overly long fight scenes. Keep the pacing brisk to maintain momentum and keep readers hooked.
Show the consequences: Illustrate the aftermath of the fight, including injuries, emotional trauma, or changes in relationships between characters. This adds depth to the scene and helps to drive the story forward.
Hope this helped ❤
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Hi, call me chi-chi, Im a multifandom digital artist, I do tend to draw,lots of anime, would you like to be friends?
Sure
Once I had a dream where I was a boy. (I’m a girl, btw)
Okay, I was pondering this on the way home from work, so, which weirdly specific (or specifically weird) thing that tends to crop up my dreams have you also noticed in yours?
Here’s a strawberry!
reblog to give a strawberry to the person you reblogged this from
I can actually see that headcanon being Canon tbh
I like to imagine the reason Puss was so cold to Perrito when they first met is because; the last person Puss trusted in a group home betrayed the ever living shit out of him.
Bro is probably traumatized
This is deathpuss guys
(She/Her) | Multifandom Blog | INFP-T | Interests: Storytelling, music, literature
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