>>11915375I will try to help you a little if you don't mind. What we write is different but perhaps we could learn a thing or two from each other.
>i'm fond of exploring human psyche(more than usual at least)This is a good idea. Writing about the human psyche will never grow out of fashion as while the times may change, so will the people.
>Creating a twisted but 'real' setting with every means necessaryBe careful not to go overboard with this, as it may detract from the previous thing which you wanted to write about.
>I write with a believe that a story should be place in a world as opposed to world being created for a story.I like the sound of that, but wouldn't you be creating at least parts of your world here? I'm talking about the "pseudoscience" stuff. Or perhaps not, as centuries ago people took the existence of gods and therefore magic as indisputable fact. You could use that for the 16th Century setting, and the "advanced science" for the future setting.
>They can be viewed as separate stories(i hope) that are just better in context.This is a great idea!
>I do too many things at once to the point that everything is connected and needs to be finished before anything can really be done.I'd be careful with that. You should start things off as simple as you can and then keep expanding your world. And like you suggested, you could write some flashbacks as their own separate stories.
>they are not exactly the target audience for this kind of storyWho is? Thinking about that might help you organise your ideas.
>it would just be a copy of lotrThis applies to every genre really, and Tolkien himself had plenty of things which inspired him to write TLoTR. That being said, it's important that your work sets itself apart from others of its kind.
I hope you could find some of that useful!