Grab some popcorn, soda, and sour patch kidsβ¦or maybe raisinets? Okay, your candy of choice because this is a long one! 14 people submitted questions with two to three questions each! Like wow!!! So, this is like the longest post ever! You can just scan till you find your questions, but I totally recommend reading it all because they kind of all buildsβ¦lolβ¦Have fun!!! Because I added in gifs to make it more fun…lol…
Here we go! *hands out popcorn* Donβt worry, Kaytiβs paying for it *winks*. She did make me answer like a hundred questionsβ¦youβre good at writing Sidekicks *rolls eyes*.
Oh, and I wanted to say for those who arenβt writers MC stands for Main Character and SK (I think I just made that abbreviation up) stands for Sidekick. Enjoy!
How do you make a sidekick feel not totally cut off from the main hero, like definitely side sidekick? Rather, how do you make them have their share of the spotlight without taking too much from the hero, but still having enough for themselves?
Well, thatβs one of the trickiest parts of writing sidekicks, making sure they donβt steal the spotlight. They have to be well developed themselves, such as backstories, humor, and anything your MC has needs to be established for the SK as well. But we donβt usually go into the SKβs head, heβs not usually the one with a problem to work out. At least, not as big a problem as the hero.
How do you write a sidekick as the main character?
Iβm not the best person to answer this since I have never done thatβ¦but I recommend as people told me, to read Sherlock Holmes as it is written from Watsonβs perspective, not Sherlock’sβ¦so go read some booksβ¦lolβ¦
Personal life. Why the sidekick and not the hero?
Generally, this is because the SK is not a leader, heβs more of a follower. (Which means my sisters and I would be SKsβ¦lolβ¦) They donβt feel confident or capable of leading and thus they are the SKβ¦or the MC is overbearing, a shadow the SK lives in and refuses to face up to till a certain part in the story where they find the courage to tell the MC how it is and thus knock some sense into the MC and he saves the day, I like those storiesβ¦lolβ¦
How to create a lovable sidekick that readers will cherish
What do you cherish about an SK? What makes you like them? What do fall in love with? Now turn around and use that in your own SK!
What are examples of traits a sidekick might have? / What qualities make up a good sidekick?
A sidekick might be loyal (think Samwise Gamgee from LotR), funny (think Pippin Took from LotR), smart (think Riley from National Treasure), brave (think Reepicheep from Narnia), or any other trait. They donβt have specific ones, but the ones mentioned above are the most commonly used and your SK can be a combo of any of the above traits! Such as funny and smart, loyal and brave, funny and loyal, brave and smartβ¦.or anything you want! Just like your MC!
How do you make your sidekicks super fun and amazing without making them more like shadows or people who get in the heroβs way? / How do you balance their positions as side characters with their individuality?
You have to think of them as their own being and not just a prop for the MC. When we think of them as nothing more than a tool to help the MC we lose out on the beauty of what an SK can be when fully developed. As for making them fun and amazingβ¦well, think of something and write it down even if itβs corny or cheesy, leave it and roll with it. You can always make it better when you edit but donβt skip over the opportunity to make a joke because you can only think of cheesy lines. It might turn out that everyone really likes the scene you thought might be cheesy.
How do you keep them from being annoying or cliche?
First, letβs address clichΓ©β¦there is nothing new under the sun. I personally, like clichΓ© thingsβ¦lolβ¦Iβm an old soul all cliches are old and thus it works out great for meβ¦lolβ¦but the main thing is to write the character in your head, you can worry about not being clichΓ© later during editing.
As for being annoying, I have not met an SK who is not annoying to the MC, Emmet is annoying to Cruz in Explorer Academy, Much is annoying to Robin in BBCβs Robin Hood, and Sam is annoying to Frodo in LotRβ¦etc. Etcβ¦If the SK and MC got along all the time itβd be no funβ¦Now, the SK being annoying to the readerβ¦this mainly happens when the SK is repeatedly getting in the way or saying things that everyone already knows. By having fully fleshed out SKs you can easily avoid both of these problems!
How to depict a sidekick who is a nerdy scientist and how to make it seem that they’re incredibly smart
Use long words and therefore you will assuredly sound one hundred times smarter than if you had simply used puny words. See how smart I sounded? Lolβ¦Iβd also recommend reading and watching smart SK, The Wars of the Realm Series by Chuck Black has a great science-smart SK named Ben, I love his character, so well done!
Also, as a side note smart characters donβt have to have glassesβ¦just saying. Thatβs clichΓ© and a bit overdoneβ¦sometimes glasses are nice, but not every time. Assuming that someone is smart because they have glasses is like assuming that because someone has braces theyβre nerdy. Itβs just not trueβ¦we have no control over whether we have braces or glassesβ¦
How to depict a flirty but loyal side kick
Okay, first offβ¦Iβm not a romance writer, not a romance reader, never dated, never flirted, how do you flirt? Questions for my older sisters thereβ¦*ask Rissy who shrugs and says to ask our married sister*
So, all that to say I have no clueβ¦I honestly write SK of the same gender as my MCβ¦usually because they’re best friendsβ¦lolβ¦I like that kind of SK. But I think, Grace A. Johnson might be able to help you with that one if you want to ask her! *Me screams βGrace, HELP!!!!β*
How to make them there for you just enough yet not always, and how to make them really matter to the reader other than just a sideline person.
Making them matter as more than a sideline person links back to developing them as their own person. They need backstory, likes, dislikes, and quirks just as much as the MCβ¦for the first part of the question when I think of SK I think of someone who is always thereβ¦lolβ¦ So, Iβm afraid Iβm not very helpfulβ¦but hey, at least Iβm honest and not just throwing out random unfounded adviceβ¦lolβ¦
How to create them as complex characters, with their own ambitions, yet show how their actions aid/adhere to the hero.
I recommend filling out a character profileβ¦that way you get a good grip on the SK, or you can do a Pinterest board which is way more fun in my humble opinion. So that will help with making them complex with their own ambitionsβ¦but they are the MCβs best friend. What would you do for your best friend? How would you help them? Take that info and use it for the SKβ¦theyβre not tools! I donβt know how much I need to stress this fact, they are characters with goals and ambitionsβ¦they can help the MC but they are not there for you to merely use when you feel like itβ¦you need to build them. I hope that makes senseβ¦lolβ¦
How do you keep the sidekicks from becoming the hero without damaging their character?
If your SK has taken over and become the heroβ¦youβre gonna have to damage him to get him back in his slot. Thereβs no way to work around that outside of making your SK the MC and your MC the SKβ¦
Why are most sidekicks more likable and relatable than the main characters?
Sometimes the MC is too perfect or too flawed and thus we end up liking the SK more. Sometimes enough work isnβt put into making sure the MC shines brighter than the SK. To avoid this problem, you need to make sure your MC is relatable. Rissy will cover that more for you guys next week!
How to make them have an interesting dynamic with the main character
What makes your friendship with your best friend unique? Whatβs something you notice in the relationships you have with your siblings, cousins, etc. Turn around and use those traits when developing the relationship between your MC and SK. Honestly, they donβt have to have anything in common. They just need to share a bond over something, whether thatβs the fact they both hate riding the bus, or they both almost died in the epidemic of 3097β¦
But the most important thing is to write them. Write their interactionsβ¦donβt make them get along all the time, thatβd be boring. Create conflict, but nothing thatβs going to spilt the friendship, or maybe you could *raises eyebrows*. Then once you have them written get feedback on it. Maybe write a scene and ask for feedback, see what people think. Ask questions, very specific questions!
How to keep the focus on the main character while still having a fully developed side character
Always make the MCβs problem bigger than the SKβs problem. Normally, weβre gonna be in the MCβs headβ¦so even if his problem isnβt as big weβre gonna think it is till proven otherwise, the only time itβs okay to make the MCβs problems smaller is when you’re writing a self-centered MC. The SK is built to bring out the best in the MC to spur him on in the hardest moments, sometimes the MC likes that, other times not so much. But the point isβ¦the story is never supposed to be focused on the SK.
So, if your story is becoming more about the SKβ¦consider why? Then figure out a way to fix itβ¦or maybe reverse the character rolesβ¦
How to make your sidekick cool but not more interesting than the hero
Well, first offβ¦SK needs a backstory, that being saidβ¦nobody but you are usually going to see that backstory. Thatβs for you to build his personality. We only get access to the SK backstory when it is related to helping the MC or some other story situation. Unlike the MC whom we get to venture into his thoughts and histories and learn everythingβ¦the readers arenβt going to get that with the SK, unless itβs absolutely, vitally, necessary.
Also, you donβt have to make the hero better at everything. Each character should have their strengths. Itβs learning to balance when the SK should shine and when notβ¦and I think somewhere in this mess of a post Iβve probably detailed it somewhereβ¦lolβ¦
Types of supporting talents/qualities the sidekick can/should have.
This really depends on what type of story youβre writing. If youβre writing a contemporary an SK with sword skills would be pretty useless, and if youβre writing a fantasy an SK who knows everything under the sun about food but canβt wield a weapon is useless (albeit it comical). So, pick talents and skills that compliment your genre and what your specific MC needs.
What do you do when the sidekick starts stealing the show?
Embrace itβ¦no just kiddingβ¦lolβ¦rein back on the SK, figure out why heβs stealing the show. Why do you like writing him more? What makes him relatable? What could make your MC easier to write? Itβs a delicate balanceβ¦but you need to make sure your MC has enough flaws and development to carry him through the story at the lead.
Why we need them, how to break stereotypes
Everyone needs someoneβ¦itβs no good to die alone. Solo: A Star Wars Storyβ¦We all need someone; humans were created by God to need each other so the SK is basically a given. Sure, your MC could go on his quest alone butβ¦no offense thatβs going to be a lame trip with no one to talk to or break up the silence or get him in or out of sticky situations.
There are tons of stereotypesβ¦I canβt go into them allβ¦but as for breaking a stereotypeβ¦the surest way to do this is to pick a stereotype you either like or donβt like and flip it. Do the exact opposite of what is usually done with it. Smart guy has glasses and is bad at sports, drop the glasses and make him a killer football player and also a tech genius. We donβt have to be one thing only. Weβre not either jocks or smartsβ¦we can be both, so go write someone as both and break the stereotypical mold!
Character development and making them seem like a trustworthy companion to the hero.
Loyalty plays a large role in this one. Showing the SK sticking with the MC during something tough (in fantasy nine times out of ten this is the MCβs parentsβ death, evil uncle, aunt, or stepparent, or a battleβ¦please find something else!).
Most of the time showing the SK making the MC laugh is enough to make me love them, I just love me a good comedian! But for some people they need to see the SK forged in fire, as it would beβ¦they want to see them stick through something tough like a car chase, a meteor, a plague that ravages the entire kingdomβ¦(literally anything but the ones I mentioned in the first note.). Or maybe itβs simply helping the MC off the curb after a bully almost runs them overβ¦we want to see the compassion the SK hasβ¦make us love him or her!
Conclusion
Probably thought I was never going to get here, didn’t you? Wow! That was a lot of questionsβ¦and I only backed out of answering one! *fist pump* Thank you guys so much for the awesome questions!!! Letβs continue this conversation in the comments and be sure to subscribe so you donβt miss next weekβs post!
How to write a Hero 101!!! (WHat does 101 stand for? Anyone know? Man I need to google that….lol…)
Also, we hit 100 SUBSCRIBERS!!!!!! WOO-HOO!!!!! (Technically we’re at 105 now…but whatever.) So in honor of the occasion, we’re launching a newsletter! Once a month weβll send out writing updates, a word of encouragement, art *jumps up and down excitedly*, tips, some random stuff, and anything God lays on our hearts for the monthly letter! You can sign-up by clicking the link below! And weβll send our first newsletter out about mid-July, Lord willing.
Till next time!
Jaidie the Dragon Nerd


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