Where Can I Take A Mary Sue Litmus Test For My OC?

2026-05-02 10:57:30 239

3 Answers

Lila
Lila
2026-05-05 19:53:40
Testing for Mary Sue vibes is like checking your breath after garlic bread—you need an outside perspective. I swear by old-school roleplay forums where strangers will bluntly tell you if your OC feels like a 'special snowflake.' Sites like RPNation or Gaia Online have critique threads for this. Another trick: flip your OC’s traits onto a canon character. If Naruto suddenly had 'mystical silver hair' and 'a dark past that outshines Sasuke’s,' you’d side-eye it, right? That’s your cue to edit. I also keep a mental checklist: unique≠interesting, and flaws≠quirks. My pirate OC used to be 'flawlessly charismatic,' but after a friend asked, 'Does she ever trip over her own boots?', I added a klutziness streak. Instant improvement.
Zoe
Zoe
2026-05-06 01:08:20
Back in my fanfic days, I stumbled on this hilarious 'Mary Sue Spotter’s Guide' on a niche blog—it was basically a flowchart of red flags ('Does your OC have heterochromia? Y/N'). Nowadays, I recommend Quotev’s interactive quizzes; they’re goofy but surprisingly thorough, covering everything from special abilities to romantic subplots. I also love how AO3 commenters will call out Sue-ish traits if you post snippets there. Once, I wrote a self-indulgent OC who could 'accidentally' solve every conflict, and within hours, someone replied, 'Ma’am, this is a Wendy’s.' Harsh but fair.

For a deeper dive, I sometimes use writing-craft sites like 'Springhole,' which has tongue-in-cheek articles like 'Is Your OC a Secret Wish Fulfillment Project?' (spoiler: mine usually are). The key is balancing critique with creativity—like, my vampire OC might have a tragic past, but now I make sure she also has terrible table manners and a weakness for bad puns.
Gavin
Gavin
2026-05-06 14:48:54
Ever since I started creating original characters, I’ve been low-key paranoid about accidentally writing a Mary Sue. It’s like walking a tightrope between making someone compelling and tipping into 'too perfect' territory. For a quick gut check, I usually hit up forums like 'Character Rant' on Reddit—they’ve got threads where people dissect OCs with brutal honesty. Alternatively, there’s the classic 'Mary Sue Litmus Test' floating around Tumblr and DeviantArt; it’s a bit outdated, but the questions still hold up (e.g., 'Does your OC have a tragic backstory that justifies everything?' or 'Do other characters inexplicably adore them?').

Lately, though, I’ve found AI tools like Character.AI weirdly useful. I feed my OC’s traits into a chatbot and see if the responses feel eye-rollingly unrealistic. If the bot starts gushing about their 'mysterious aura' or 'flawless combat skills,' I know it’s time to dial things back. Also, writing groups! My Discord server has a dedicated OC-roast channel where we mercilessly poke holes in each other’s creations. Nothing beats live feedback from people who’ve binged enough anime to spot a cliché from miles away.
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