Ellie truly is the anti-vore rabbit
6 years ago
General
I like vore. It's pretty obvious if you look at my favorites or who I follow. I also have a novel I am trying to publish, and sometimes I like to write short "what if" scenarios with my characters. I've only published one here because I feel most give too much away. I might publish some here after my novel has been out for a while. Anyway, you would think this non-canon stuff would be a good place for me to write some vore. The thing is it's tricky.
You see, my favorite character is my bunny character Ellie. Herbivores can be preds of course; it's something I like, but Ellie just wouldn't do that. I've only successfully written her permanently voring another character once, and I was so convinced that I'd done her a disservice and butchered her character that I wrote this footnote at the end: "This is the Evillie version. Evillie is Ellie’s evil clone who does all of the terrible things Ellie would never do. Ellie is good because she has genuine compassion and concern for others. Evillie is good because she is weak: if she were evil, she would quickly be destroyed. However, whenever Evillie gains power over someone, her fiendish nature is soon revealed." Yeah...
I have written "Evillie" versions of some other shorts (I like to write multiple versions of the same story to explore different outcomes.), but even in those the bad end is typically just left to the future. The other character realizes they will be eaten or killed at some later date after Evillie gets done with them, or Evillie's inner monologue tells us she is going to continue to torment them. There was one story where Ellie swallowed and then coughed up a serial killer a few times, but it was an Ellie story, so she eventually had mercy and gave them over to Jason (my cat character) who is basically incapable of any cruel action. There was also a version that almost made it into the actual novel where the serial killer vixen ate someone. Despite my trying to give Ellie other chances to eat someone and even giving her ample reason like they were going to eat her, she simply won't do it.
Thus, Ellie truly is the anti-vore rabbit. Even if she wants revenge on someone who hurt her, it's finite. She has some revenge, and then she doesn't want any more, which is why the shorts have to end with the implied future bad end. If it is truly Ellie, she will have mercy. Even Evillie might turn out to be Ellie if the story was allowed to go on, and Ellie can't continue to torment someone. She can't kill them if it's not self-defense. Even when Evillie ate someone, it happened fast, and she was angry.
Lately, I've been avoiding Evillie altogether and letting Ellie be Ellie. When Ellie gets into control, the stories always have a happy end, and no one gets eaten. So there you go, that's how Ellie stopped me from writing vore.
You see, my favorite character is my bunny character Ellie. Herbivores can be preds of course; it's something I like, but Ellie just wouldn't do that. I've only successfully written her permanently voring another character once, and I was so convinced that I'd done her a disservice and butchered her character that I wrote this footnote at the end: "This is the Evillie version. Evillie is Ellie’s evil clone who does all of the terrible things Ellie would never do. Ellie is good because she has genuine compassion and concern for others. Evillie is good because she is weak: if she were evil, she would quickly be destroyed. However, whenever Evillie gains power over someone, her fiendish nature is soon revealed." Yeah...
I have written "Evillie" versions of some other shorts (I like to write multiple versions of the same story to explore different outcomes.), but even in those the bad end is typically just left to the future. The other character realizes they will be eaten or killed at some later date after Evillie gets done with them, or Evillie's inner monologue tells us she is going to continue to torment them. There was one story where Ellie swallowed and then coughed up a serial killer a few times, but it was an Ellie story, so she eventually had mercy and gave them over to Jason (my cat character) who is basically incapable of any cruel action. There was also a version that almost made it into the actual novel where the serial killer vixen ate someone. Despite my trying to give Ellie other chances to eat someone and even giving her ample reason like they were going to eat her, she simply won't do it.
Thus, Ellie truly is the anti-vore rabbit. Even if she wants revenge on someone who hurt her, it's finite. She has some revenge, and then she doesn't want any more, which is why the shorts have to end with the implied future bad end. If it is truly Ellie, she will have mercy. Even Evillie might turn out to be Ellie if the story was allowed to go on, and Ellie can't continue to torment someone. She can't kill them if it's not self-defense. Even when Evillie ate someone, it happened fast, and she was angry.
Lately, I've been avoiding Evillie altogether and letting Ellie be Ellie. When Ellie gets into control, the stories always have a happy end, and no one gets eaten. So there you go, that's how Ellie stopped me from writing vore.
bugmenot665
~bugmenot665
It's always interesting when your characters gain a mind of their own!
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