I thought I would do something a little different with this blog post. I wanted to give a review of a creative resource I've been using. It started off as a lark that I reached out to The Character Consultancy on FurAffinity. The first project was a character commission for Brooke Amira, who I based loosely on Amos Burton from The Expanse.
I knew vaguely that I wanted Brooke to be a tough, no-nonsense character with tragic parts in her past. Still, there was a sort of general "Not everyone who is broken can't be strong" sort of vibe I wanted. Naturally, some of the problems that I had dealt with Brooke's relationship building and the confusion/uncertainty of how her anti-social life would affect things. TCC was very complete on this, and we had several back and forth conversations about this. As this was the first time we worked together, I felt a lot more of a take than a given situation. Now it's pretty back and forth since we've worked together so often now. I prefer to listen to experts when I can, more so when I'm paying them. When something would pop up I wasn't sure about, I would say so, and we'd talk about it.
The above made working with TCC really easy, and Brooke's background profile was finished well before her reference sheet.
The process was to fill out a word document and then give it to her to review and process. TCC is working on an actual degree in psychology, so this was a psychological look at the character and the background. Officially she refers to herself as an advanced trainee therapist specializing in the form of psychology called Transactional Analysis. It provided a lot of fascinating insight into Brooke that I, as a writer, hadn't thought of. There's a lot of areas that I do research on when I'm writing, but I can't claim to have a degree in psychology. No matter how much I researched something, I'm just scratching the surface.
So there was a lot of back and forth with the TCC on Brooke, and throughout working on this one character, I decided to do it for my fursona, Rose Dandy-Ba. Rose started off in a Zootopia RPG, but I left to create my own furry universe called Pacific Shores. But Rose provided TCC a great template to work with. Rose has a lot of art, as you can see since she's all over the site, and has a very well-developed story.
The process was fun and exciting. I did another character, and another, and another, and another. I've done a few of these on my own that I've yet to pay for TCC to review, but she'll get to see them at some point. Make no mistake, this is a business relationship. But even though I've had several paid interactions with the TCC, she's always cordial and easy to get in touch with.
The process was so fun that I tried some of her other services. We're currently working on a species profile for my Earth From An Alien Viewpoint, along with those character backgrounds and a world setup based on my magic system. Each of these packages is a different price. I've never asked if she offers options on payment plans or the like. I'm not a typical fan who commissions things.
Now, the critical reason why I stick with The Character Consultancy. Besides it's fun, I'm looking at this as a long term investment for my writing. As an author, I know I'll always need an editor to look over my items. TCC isn't an editorial service, but she knows I plan to talk to my next book. No, what TCC offers is the outside viewpoint and an analytical approach to filling in your world gaps. She reads what you've put, and then she asks questions based on the information she has as a psychologist and what you've given her. In the case of Kiadan Slywyth, I had always had her having a tragic death. Still, through conversations on that character's background, we found a way for Kiadan to stay true to herself and to wrap up her life in a way that was dignified and plausible. Could an editor do this? Certainly, but most editors I know will charge 25 to 50 dollars an hour for this. Not to say I'm doing this to cheap out on an editor. I suspect Earth From An Alien Viewpoint will still cost me around 3k to have a professional editor go over it. No, she's helping me to connect dots that I hadn't thought of.
As an author, my head is in the source material. I know more than others about what's going on, and TCC gradually pulls this out of me. She has a question, and she asks what is pertinent to the exact task at hand. I've provided info dumps to her, and TCC will look at that and say, "Yeah, well interesting, out of scope." To me, everything is in scope cause it's my world. But she comes in with fresh eyes that haven't seen my work.
Speaking of seeing my work, if you join her Patreon, she'll review your work as well. Which I've had her do, and while it's just surface-level thoughts on the job, it's good to know because TCC is acting as a potential reader. You can never have enough opinions about your work.
So, critical things to look at The Character Consultancy for. They're easy to work with, they're I feel affordable, courtesy, and the conversations/questions you have will really drive, in my opinion, the development of your skill as a writer.
I don't want to say something so trivial as 4 out of 5 stars or anything like that. You can't really quantify TCC's work as such. It's a unique operation that has no comparison on the market right now. I feel that if you're looking at this individual and you have a serious mind to improve your capacity for creativity, then go ahead and take a shot. Like I said, I picked it up on a lark, and I've not been disappointed in any of the experiences I've had with her. I can assure you I'll be working with her in the future.