I'm of the mind that if Rey is a Mary Sue, then Luke is a Marty Stu.
I don't think it's worth keeping the gender distinction. They can both be Mary Sue. Girls can be waiters. Boys can be Karens. It's much simpler this way.
I'm of the mind that if Rey is a Mary Sue, then Luke is a Marty Stu.
And neither Rey nor Luke come close to Anakin.I'm of the mind that if Rey is a Mary Sue, then Luke is a Marty Stu.
I used the term Marty Stu because I think that, in this case, the distinction is necessary. Those who refer to Rey as a Mary Sue may well be doing so simply because she is a she. I've used the term to describe Burnham in "Discovery", but will freely admit now that I was wrong. She's just a badly written character, in a show I don't particularly like.I don't think it's worth keeping the gender distinction. They can both be Mary Sue. Girls can be waiters. Boys can be Karens. It's much simpler this way.
Ah, yes. The Virgin Birth who is universally loved, until everything explodes.And neither Rey nor Luke come close to Anakin.
the conversation between Vader and Luke that never happened-just for your entertainment![]()
Here's the thing she can be a Mary Sue and a badly written character.I used the term Marty Stu because I think that, in this case, the distinction is necessary. Those who refer to Rey as a Mary Sue may well be doing so simply because she is a she. I've used the term to describe Burnham in "Discovery", but will freely admit now that I was wrong. She's just a badly written character, in a show I don't particularly like.
What's happening in reddit?I wonder if Reddit going insane is going to drive a bunch of D&D redditers this way.
Yes, the term Mary Sue originated in fanfiction, that doesn’t mean it’s limited to only ever applying to fanfiction characters. The author self-insert character who’s hyper-competent in corporate media is just as much a Mary Sue as any fanfiction character with the same traits. The definitional aspect is the traits themselves, not whether they appear in fanfiction.A reminder that the term comes from fanfiction to describe a self-insert who is the better than and beloved to the original canon characters; it does not apply to any character in any major work of non-fan fiction and especially not any character that has a character arc or experiences failures and grows as a result, which every character mentioned above certainly qualifies under