• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

WotC Seeking Your Setting Proposals (was "Big Wizard announcement")

Status
Not open for further replies.
Re: Re: Re: Story Line . . . ?

trix said:

Hehe, I went to eng->lat online translators... the translations were too good.

Hey, where did you find one ?
Btw., I'm also looking for eng->greek and eng->hebrew - if somebody knows where to find such a thing, I'll take gladly.

(french->latin/greek/hebrew are also accepted)

BRY,
YA
 
Last edited:

log in or register to remove this ad


Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: aaaarrrrrgggghhhh

Vaxalon said:


THere won't be any rejection letters. You'll know you're rejected when you don't get accepted.

That would be incredibly stupid on the part of WOTC.

1. People who submitted are their core customers. If I were them I'd be sending out a form Thank-you letter. If they're really smart they would promise to later send a coupon for the first product released for the new campaign setting. Want to convince any potential sour grapes folks to buy the new setting!

River
 

Besides, it's not Anthony V. et al that's going to be sending out the 'rejection' letters.


It's going to be poor Christina once more, looking up 10-thousand email addresses.....

Someone send that girl flowers already!
 


Re: What are people actually writing?

Morgenstern said:
I have the weirdest sensation that people were largely writing stuff that is far, far away from the point of this exercise...

Did anyone else treat it as a marketable product line proposal first, fantasy world second?


This was my feeling all along. Mine came out a lot more like the blurb from the back of the campaign setting box/book than a one page summary of a world. 'Course I could be completely wrong.

Many folks are talking about "explaining" their world within the given limits. I had a dreadful feeling that if I had to explain it, it shouldn't have gone in the one page. I felt that the one page should make them want to know more, not feel like they already understand it.

Of course, there's only one way to find out who is right and who is round filed. Bring on July 3.
 

Wow. According to Bruce Cordell, who posted over on Monte's boards, at the rate the submissions have been coming in, he wouldn't be surprised if they "broke 20,000." :eek:

Man, I expected some stiff competition, but yeesh...
 

mouseferatu said:
Wow. According to Bruce Cordell, who posted over on Monte's boards, at the rate the submissions have been coming in, he wouldn't be surprised if they "broke 20,000." :eek:

Man, I expected some stiff competition, but yeesh...
1 in 10,000....
1 in 20,000....

Still better than the lottery.
 

Number of entries greater than expected

Man, I just hope they up the number of 10-page slots somewhat proportionately to the number of responses they get. Reducing even 10,000+ entires to only ten second round competitors on only a week stinks of crap shoot rather than carefully considered review. I am fairly confident that 50 or even 100 of the most serious competitors would be willing to write a 10-page synopsis if that will increase the odds of their submissions being judged on merit rather than "this looked pretty good after 70 straight hours of reading these things..." ;).

I think a lot of people would write 10-pagers just for the practice of getting their thoughts together :rolleyes:.
 

Re: Number of entries greater than expected

Morgenstern said:
Man, I just hope they up the number of 10-page slots somewhat proportionately to the number of responses they get. Reducing even 10,000+ entires to only ten second round competitors on only a week stinks of crap shoot rather than carefully considered review. I am fairly confident that 50 or even 100 of the most serious competitors would be willing to write a 10-page synopsis if that will increase the odds of their submissions being judged on merit rather than "this looked pretty good after 70 straight hours of reading these things..." ;).

I think a lot of people would write 10-pagers just for the practice of getting their thoughts together :rolleyes:.

How many times can you protect a caravan?
How many different ways can you write the word 'caravan'?

Not alot.
Alot of the worlds will be based on an archtypical setting. Most will be the same as 10%(guess) of the other entries. There might be 10(guess) major threads of entries.

There may be only 20(guess) unique types of entries out of 20000(guess) once major archtypes are considered and discarsded.

They then will have to whitle things down. Obviously, it would be better to have two writers per unique entry (since one might botch a setting up... that doesnt mean the setting is bad).

So there should be at least 20x2 settings that should make the second round: But it should all be dependant on how many unique settings there are, not how many entrants there are.

They probably thought that they'd get maybe 1000 entries... well.. hehe... they underestimated. They've got 10 days to cover 20000(guess) entries.

Thats 2000 entries a day.

Thats 300 per panel member per day. Thats 37 an hour, or 2 mins per entry.

So... they'll read the ethos, then they'll read the 'whats different', and if its good, then they'll put it asside as one of the few that they will review after work.

If they've got 10000 entries, they'll spend 3 mins on each. I'm assuming 6 panel members working a full 8 hours a day for 10 days. We all know that that will be difficult to do.

a) Either they get more panel members
b) Slip the July 3rd date
c) Do a bad job at reading everything
d) work alot of overtime

Its actually less time, since they need at least a day as a panel to whitle things down from 100 to 10~20.

-Tim
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top