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secondary-action-mastery

@dylantarre/animation-principles
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Use when enriching primary animations, adding supporting details, creating depth in motion, or making scenes feel alive without distracting from main action.

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SKILL.md

name secondary-action-mastery
description Use when enriching primary animations, adding supporting details, creating depth in motion, or making scenes feel alive without distracting from main action.

Secondary Action Mastery

The Enrichment Principle

Secondary action adds life to a scene without distracting from the main action. A character walking (primary) while whistling and swinging their arms (secondary). A button pressing (primary) with a subtle ripple effect (secondary). It's the difference between functional animation and rich, immersive motion.

Core Theory

Subordination principle: Secondary action must never compete with primary action. If viewers watch the secondary instead of primary, you've failed. The supporting role must remain supporting.

Reinforcement function: Good secondary action reinforces the primary action's meaning. It doesn't just add motion—it adds dimension to the story being told.

The Distinction: Secondary Action vs. Overlapping Action

These are often confused:

  • Overlapping action: Physical consequence (hair moving because head moved)
  • Secondary action: Independent supporting action (whistling while walking)

Overlapping is reactive; secondary is additive.

Categories of Secondary Action

Emotional reinforcement: Nervous fidgeting during dialogue, triumphant fist pump after scoring Environmental response: Clothes rippling in wind, breath visible in cold Character business: Adjusting glasses, playing with hair, drumming fingers Ambient life: Background characters, environmental animation, idle behaviors

Interaction with Other Principles

Staging determines secondary action visibility: Secondary must stay subordinate in composition.

Timing offsets prevent competition: Secondary often runs on different timing than primary.

Overlapping action often becomes secondary: The physics-driven motion enriches without distracting.

Follow through provides transition: Secondary action settles as primary action completes.

Domain Applications

UI/Motion Design

  • Button interactions: Primary press, secondary subtle shadow shift or icon micro-animation
  • Loading states: Primary spinner, secondary pulsing background or floating particles
  • Card components: Primary content animation, secondary ambient glow or shadow movement
  • Form submission: Primary success state, secondary confetti or subtle celebration
  • Navigation: Primary page transition, secondary subtle parallax layers

Character Animation

  • Walk cycles: Primary locomotion, secondary arm swing, head bob, breathing
  • Dialogue: Primary lip sync and expression, secondary hand gestures, weight shifts
  • Action scenes: Primary combat, secondary environmental reactions, crowd responses
  • Idle states: Primary pose hold, secondary subtle breathing, blinking, micro-movements

Interface Polish

  • Dashboards: Primary data updates, secondary ambient chart breathing
  • Notifications: Primary message entry, secondary badge pulse
  • Empty states: Primary message, secondary animated illustration
  • Transitions: Primary content swap, secondary skeleton loading, background fade

Game Feel

  • Player actions: Primary attack animation, secondary screen shake, particle burst
  • Environment: Primary player movement, secondary grass swaying, dust kicks
  • Menus: Primary selection change, secondary hover particles, background animation

Common Mistakes

  1. Upstaging the primary: Secondary action too prominent, draws focus away
  2. Unrelated secondary: Actions that don't reinforce primary meaning
  3. Overcrowded secondary: Too many supporting actions create noise
  4. Missing secondary entirely: Scene feels static, lifeless, incomplete

The Subtlety Spectrum

Minimal (professional contexts): 10-20% amplitude of primary action Moderate (consumer products): 30-40% amplitude Expressive (entertainment, games): 50-60% amplitude Theatrical (cartoons, celebrations): 70%+ amplitude

Match to context and brand personality.

The "Remove and Test" Method

Animate with secondary action, then temporarily remove it. If the scene feels dead, the secondary is working. If you don't notice it's gone, it was probably too subtle—or unnecessary.

Implementation Heuristic

For every primary action, ask: "What else would be moving, reacting, or happening?" Add the single most valuable secondary action. Only add more if the first doesn't create competition. Time secondary action to offset from primary—either starting slightly before, during hold phases, or in the settling aftermath.