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APRIL 2012 CHALLENGE - "Abandoned"

Goodness me I wasn't expecting this sort of reaction to just saying 'write however many words you like' and that'll be fine!

I think COUNT ZERO has summed it up pretty well: the contest's 25 day duration, coupled with the amount of time and effort people are willing to put in will naturally self-regulate the size of the entries I think.

For example an arbitrary limit of ten or twenty thousand words will still lead to most people entering stories of a thousand words or so because of the factors mentioned above, plus the fact that the story may naturally only take a thousand or so words to tell.

Not everything can be spun out into to a ten thousand word story like the one I entered for BRY SINCLAIR'S challenge.

If this contest does have four of five massive entries then I'll apologise, but I think some people are worrying about something that isn't going to happen to be honest.

Just my opinion though.
 
You're the only one in this discussion who's being overdramatic, Sandoval.
Your entitled to your opinion of course, but your username being a different colour to mine doesn't automatically make that opinion right I'm afraid.

Others are being just as over dramatic.
 
All right, Sandoval, let's look at the two posts which prompted your "drama queens" remark:

I think some maximum word limit should be imposed. If you get too many too long stories, there might not be time to read them or read them all for the voting.

I cannot recall a TrekBBS contest without a word limit.

That doesn't sound dramatic at all. Gul Re'jal made a suggestion and gave her reason for doing so in a calm, rational manner. Nerys Ghemor just chimed in with an anecdote affirming her suggestion.
Your post in which you presumably accused these posters of being drama queens was followed by Gul Re'jal and Bry Sinclair saying that people posting long stories isn't that unlikely. They, too, stayed civil and undramatic. So did Admiral2 who gave a more detailed view of the matter, though I would have preferred if he hadn't taken up your "drama queens" comment at the end of his post.
So, yes, the only one whose comments can be considered overdramatic is you, Sandoval. Maybe you didn't mean it that way, maybe your posts come across to people here than you intend them to, maybe you perceive other people's posts differently but the posts in this thread speak a very clear language.
No one suggested the forum would fall apart or the challenge would fail because of the lack of a word limit. Some people just suggested a word limit would be better because of their own experiences and they were able to argue their point.
 
Again though, that is your opinion.

Your opinion is that I'm the only person being overdramatic, and my opinion is that I am not.

I'm merely responding to the rather unlikely predictions that no word limit will result in a deluge of massive entries that people will subsequently refuse to read based upon their size, when in reality this contest will doubtless end with three or four entries of a couple of thousand words each.
 
Yeah, but tone does also matter. Hyperbole usually doesn't help one's arguments.
 
Goodness me I wasn't expecting this sort of reaction to just saying 'write however many words you like' and that'll be fine!

I once said "Pick your own topic." You should have seen the fun we had over that. ;)

I think COUNT ZERO has summed it up pretty well: the contest's 25 day duration, coupled with the amount of time and effort people are willing to put in will naturally self-regulate the size of the entries I think.

For example an arbitrary limit of ten or twenty thousand words will still lead to most people entering stories of a thousand words or so because of the factors mentioned above, plus the fact that the story may naturally only take a thousand or so words to tell.

If that's true it's a recent thing. In my experience entrants don't regulate themselves. The word limit is there to tell them when to stop writing. The only way you get a thousand word story is to set a thousand word limit...maybe. Fan fic writers like trying to fill the space you give them.


Not everything can be spun out into to a ten thousand word story like the one I entered for BRY SINCLAIR'S challenge.

That won't stop a lot of folks from trying. Some will succeed.

If this contest does have four of five massive entries then I'll apologise, but I think some people are worrying about something that isn't going to happen to be honest.

Just my opinion though.

We'll see.
 
I once said "Pick your own topic." You should have seen the fun we had over that.
So there's a precedent for people being so averse to free reign?

In any case, I think that stories will naturally be limited due to aforementioned constraints regarding time and effort.

"Pick your own topic" seems a little different from letting people chose how many words they wish to write.


That won't stop a lot of folks from trying. Some will succeed.

And the best of luck to them. :)

If this contest does have four of five massive entries then I'll apologise, but I think some people are worrying about something that isn't going to happen to be honest.

Just my opinion though.
We'll see.

We certainly will. :)gl
 
Been a while since I posted in here - things have gotten a bit crazy for me lately, as I sort of figured they would. Though the "what if" concept didn't really work for me as a writer, since I don't write the pre-established characters, as a reader (and a Trek fan) I enjoyed the entries, especially Angry Fanboy's. I didn't vote because I just wasn't visiting this forum at the right time due to being so busy (I actually read all the entries after the voting closed), but he won anyway so it doesn't really matter. :lol: "Abandoned", hm... I might be able to put something together, the ideas are swirling a bit...

I think Count Zero is basically right, in that if someone really DOES write a 50k+ length story, there are going to be a number of people who might have voted for it, if only they'd had time to read it. And granted, I don't know the history of these challenges all that well, but based on what I've observed, it doesn't seem all that likely that we'll get very many such stories. Personally, the only time I'd even try to write fifty-thousand words in one month - let alone succeed! - is during NaNoWriMo. :D I understand why people are saying a max word count is a good idea, but I don't think it's an absolute necessity. Without that max limit to shoot for, I think I'd probably end up somewhere around the 15k-ish range; long, but not insanely so. That said:
Personally, I'd like to see the contests get back to 3500 and 5000 word limits because the other point is perfectly valid. There are some readers who won't even look at the stories until voting time, then read all of them in a bunch before making their decisions. Even if you only get two 50,000 word entries, that leaves the judges reading the equivalent of a moderate-sized book before they even go near the poll.
As I said, I understand the reason for word count limits and have no problem with the contest having one, and each month's winner is free to set whatever limit they want to. But I personally feel the opposite when it comes to the kinds of lengths you are talking about. Anything below 5000, and I probably won't even bother in most cases. That's just not how my inner writer operates. As far as reading, I'm much more likely to enjoy a 3-5k story written by someone else than I am to write my own of that length, but even so, I still think that generally speaking, stories that are a bit longer than that (8k+, at least) simply allow more time to flesh things out and usually make for more compelling reads.

Great post SAITO S, difficult to disagree with anything you've said there.

I'm like you, short scenes of a thousand words or so don't really do it for me and I prefer something I can get my teeth into a little, hence why I decided to give people free reign to write however many they wanted to for this challenge.

I struggled with the 10,000 limit that BRY SINCLAIR set! :lol:
 
So there's a precedent for people being so averse to free reign?

They had other problems, but the topic thing was a sticking point.

In any case, I think that stories will naturally be limited due to aforementioned constraints regarding time and effort.

Direct restraints are more effective.

"Pick your own topic" seems a little different from letting people chose how many words they wish to write.

It's the same in that a set topic and a set word limit are constraints some find necessary.
 
Not everyone will participate in every challenge, anyway. I'm looking forward to this month's (hopefully numerous) entries.
 
So there's a precedent for people being so averse to free reign?

They had other problems, but the topic thing was a sticking point.

In any case, I think that stories will naturally be limited due to aforementioned constraints regarding time and effort.
Direct restraints are more effective.

"Pick your own topic" seems a little different from letting people chose how many words they wish to write.
It's the same in that a set topic and a set word limit are constraints some find necessary.

I'm not going to carry on with this, it's becoming tiresome.

Those who wish to participate can, those who don't wish to, whether that be due to having no "direct restraints" or whatever else, are equally welcome to pass. "Direct restraints are more effective" just sounds so autocratic and joyless in my opinion.

There is no word limit for this month's challenge, so if some people find a word limit "necessary" in order to participate then clearly this one is not for them.

This is all a complete storm in a teacup though that is taking the shine off winning the challenge.
 
I once said "Pick your own topic." You should have seen the fun we had over that.
So there's a precedent for people being so averse to free reign?

I don't look at it that way, as some sort of hate for freedom. Rather, writing within the boundaries of the topic and word count is part of the challenge--you not only must just do a freewrite, but you must plan and edit your stories appropriately and manage your time sufficiently to pull it off within the right time frame. It's very similar to writing a short story for a print anthology, which I'm sure is something that some of the authors here either have done or would like to do at some time.
 
I'm not going to carry on with this, it's becoming tiresome.

Those who wish to participate can, those who don't wish to, whether that be due to having no "direct restraints" or whatever else, are equally welcome to pass. "Direct restraints are more effective" just sounds so autocratic and joyless in my opinion.

"Autocratic and joyless?" Remember you wrote that at poll time when one of your entrants asks if he can vote for his own story. :D
 
Few things are more pathetic than people voting for their own story in my opinion.

Jespah did it once.
 
Show me where I did that. I have entered, far as I recall, three of these. And I have not voted for my own work.

Show me where I did that.
 
Show me where I did that. I have entered, far as I recall, three of these. And I have not voted for my own work.

Show me where I did that.
Nah. I'm not bothered enough to go to that much effort I'm afraid.
 
Why not? You do have the burden of proof. Here, I'll even make it easy for you. I entered the January, February and March challenges. I voted for Milo Bloom for this one. In February, there were only two of us and so I did not vote. So - did I vote for myself in January? Gonna put your money where your mouth is? No? I didn't think so.
 
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