Maybe there's an antagonist, like a dark bender who has turned to the wrong side and uses their powers for evil. This character would create conflict for the main bender characters, constantly challenging them and trying to disrupt the balance in their world.
There are many different schools of mystery novels, and one of them is the social-benders. The social-basicist school was a genre of mystery novels, which advocated that mystery novels should be social-critical and reveal various problems in social reality through mystery novels. The representative works of this genre included Murder on the Oriental Express, Twelve Angry Men, Murder in a Few Words, and so on.
The Water Margins was a classic novel by the Ming Dynasty novelist Shi Naian. It was called the Water Margins. It mainly told the story of 108 righteous men who gathered at Liangshan Lake to resist the ruling class. This novel was widely praised and adapted into a classic in the history of Chinese literature.
I don't know who created the 'black water original story' as the name is quite general and there could be many different stories with this title. It could be an individual writer, a storyteller from a particular community, or even a group effort in some cases.
One interesting storyline could be about the benders facing a new and powerful supernatural entity that challenges their abilities in unexpected ways. For example, they might encounter a spirit that can manipulate time, causing chaos in their world.
Sure. 'The Bender's War' by L. Ron Hubbard is a well - known one. It offers a richly detailed fictional account of a war with a unique perspective on military strategy and the characters involved in the conflict.