Thread:Bat0930/@comment-961279-20190803151056

I noticed that on some of your pages, you had phrases like "secondary tritagonist" and "quaternary tritagonist" in them. When phrases like that are used, very often you'll see people fussing over exactly what kind of antagonist or protagonist they are and they'll go back and forth, changing it almost every time because no one can decide exactly what level the character should be.

Phrases like this also contradict themselves. "Tritagonist" has been used for both "there are three main characters that are all equally important" and "this is a character that is two levels down in importance from the main character". Also, sometimes it's used for protagonists and sometimes it's used for antagonists, like you did for Lani and for Nigel.

Add "secondary" in front of it and that changes the first one to mean "there are three main characters that are all equally important, but this one is less important than the other two so he's not a main character any more", and the second one becomes "this is a character that is two levels down in importance from the main character, but he's less important than other third-level characters", so he's actually a fourth-level or a sixth-level character.

These kind of phrases are overly-complicated ways of describing characters that say nothing about who the character is, what they do, how they interact with others, what their motivations are, and everything else that makes a character a person. 