I’m talking about mainly third person narrators in fiction, like for example, “if you have felt/heard/seen X then…”. What is it called?
Authorial intrusion.
‘Omniscient Narrator.’
It’s a “second person” point of view, where the narrator addresses you, the reader, directly.
Unlike in TV/movies, and sometimes in writing “breaking the fourth wall”, instead of a character turning to the audience, this shattering the fiction of a “fourth wall”, in 2nd person, it’s the narrator.
It can sometimes be a character narrating, but that usually takes on a sort of storytelling motif, where a character is telling you a story about what happened to them.
The Deadpool movies flow back and forth between all these things frequently, as an example.
It seems like the best fit, but I’m not actually sure if that would apply either. The definition listed there is when a character talks directly to the audience, like in a Deadpool movie when he makes a joke as an aside, it seems to more apply to characters inside the story, not outside. I guess you can argue that the Narrator is considered a character in a story, but in my mind they’ve always seemed sort of nebulous and outside “the story” (with some exceptions to this). The Narrator is sort of always talking to the reader in a way (unless it’s a character specifically narrating the events to another character).
I think comments are messed up, so if someone answered (or if someone gave this answer and it was wrong…) apologies!
Isn’t it “breaking the fourth wall”?