Character Sheet Template

I’ve had such a ridiculously hard time lately trying to look up old characters, either from half-finished WIPs that I’ve recently picked up again, or from books I plan to publish but need to give a character description for the cover artist to work from. My Google-fu is pretty good, but a text search will only take you so far.

So yesterday, I put together a rough template for a character sheet. I plan to fill one out for every major character in my WIPs from now on.

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CHARACTER SHEET:
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FULL NAME:

AGE:
HEIGHT:
WEIGHT:
BUILD:
SKIN:
HAIR:
EYES:
OTHER:
MYERS-BRIGGS:
POLITICS:
SOCIAL CLASS:
RELIGION:
EDUCATION:
OCCUPATION:
RELATIONS:
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BACKSTORY:

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MOTIVATIONS:

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STRENGTHS & ADVANTAGES:

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FLAWS & HANDICAPS:

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SYMPATHETIC HOW?

By Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek is the author of more than twenty science fiction books, including the Star Wanderers and Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus. He claims Utah as his home.

3 comments

  1. Does having a MYERS-BRIGGS on them really help you? Also, would adding an image of the character help? I sometimes do that, using actors or models as my pictorial guide for description.

    1. I find that it does, but I’m partial to the Myers-Briggs typology. You might prefer a different personality test.

      I’ve only tried picturing my characters a couple of times. It made things a bit more interesting, but not enough to make a huge difference. Then again, I’m not a very visual writer, at least when it comes to my characters. That’s part of the reason why it’s so hard to remember their hair, eye color, etc.

      1. That makes sense, I have trouble remembering because my worlds are so big, so character sheets are key! I also find that these sheets greatly help your developmental editors.

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