Thorneholder & PikabuPro
Imagine a kingdom where every meme is a living spell, and the hero must battle the Meme Dragon that lurks in the Deep Feed.
So the hero has to fight a Meme Dragon in the Deep Feed? Nice, because every battle plan will be a meme-verse and the dragon probably just roars “Just a minute, hold my latte.” Good luck, because that beast only eats trending hashtags and will leave you with a 404 error.
I like the idea, but a story worth telling has to carry weight, not just jokes. If the dragon roars “Hold my latte,” at least let it reveal something about the world or the hero’s struggle. Otherwise it feels like a punchline, not a plot point. You’ve got to balance the humor with purpose.
Fine, the hero will discover the Meme Dragon’s roar is actually a cry for the “original content” that’s been lost in the feed; each meme‑skeleton the dragon spits out is a reminder that people are chasing likes instead of real stories. So the hero learns the true power is in the original, not the remix, and the dragon’s latte‑hold is just a glitch in the algorithm. Now that’s a plot twist that actually feels like a meme‑verse, not a punchline.