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MAKKAPATI That is exactly why I'm asking you how you are going to take it and explain it. You can use the same concept, but you need a way to explain why people should read your take on the genre. Claiming that a guy transfers his memories into several different people is cool and all, but you need to elaborate why that is interesting. What is he going to do with several different people that has his memories? Is he going to wage war with the guys who go rogue with his memories? Are they going to form a hive mind? Hell, what is the purpose behind downloading his memories into several people - are they all supposed to form some sort of secret illumati in the fantasy world? I only raised the example of a group of people being summoned to another world to illustrate one point - if your guy is merely downloading his memories into multiple people to build a city (for example), you might as well just summon a bunch of different people to the other world to build the city. You won't be using the "more than one person receive the memory" thing to its full potential. It's like saying, "this story is different because a guy brings a flamethrower to another world!" If the whole point is to have him use fire, why not just give him fire magic, because it achieves the same effect? Basically, you have to elaborate how exactly "more than one person receiving the memory" is different, not just tell us "this is different!" and expect us to understand. What is he going to do with a bunch of people who has his memories downloaded in them? What happens after he does that? Your story is not going to end there, right? That's the part you have to elaborate, not how he got there. By the way, don't respond to this. These are all examples. I'm not asking you for an answer. Just explaining the writing process.
I never said anything, I already said I don't care about the minor details, you can have the protagonist handwave everything into existence and that's fine.