AO3 has reached 25,000 fandoms! To celebrate, we’ve put together info about fandom tags and how all tags work: https://goo.gl/W4wPxH
Hey folks who use AO3 – please read and reblog widely. In addition to the celebration of our 25,000th canonical fandom, this post contains some great tips for making our tagging system work for you.
As a Support Staffer and Tag Wrangler for AO3, I beg you:
Among the tips:
Separate your / and & ships / is for romantic and/or sexual
relationships. & is for platonic relationships only – ones that are
neither sexual nor romantic. (Pre- and Post-Relationship are still /.)
& was created for those Gen fans who don’t want anything
non-platonic in the ships they’re searching for. You can help both Gen
fans and shippers by carefully choosing the tag that matches your work!
Look, I know you’re writing a slow burn where the friendship aspect of the relationship is important. I applaud that; I love it in my romantic pairings. But it’s a /, not a &. Please save & for those of us who want to find the three truly and purely gen fics for a popular romantic ship.
Folks, I LOVE AO3, please read and share!
As someone relatively new to using AO3, I did not really realise this. *goes back to check tags* THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS.
A post just crossed my dash that put the worst taste in my mouth. I don’t want to reblog it, but I do want to address the contents because I think the subject is super important.
The post basically boiled down to: fanfic writers are thin-skinned babies “these days” because no one can take constructive criticism. In “my day” we all sent page-long critiques like the dedicated heroes we were! It made us better writers! Moreover, if I didn’t like something, I told the writer all about it! It was my job!
Hold up, what?
I’ve been posting fanfic online since 1998. Twenty years. Pre-archives. And “in my day” we had betas if we wanted/needed/asked for them (whose critiques didn’t have an audience). We said “concrit welcome” if we actually wanted constructive criticism. We did not show up unannounced to point out a work’s flaws because that is rude. Look, I am an editor. People pay me real money to edit things for them. I would rather cut off my own fingers than burst into someone’s comments and start “critiquing” their work without being asked first.
Here’s something that needs to be addressed: fanfiction is real writing, yes, but it is, by its nature as something that isn’t monetized, a hobby. As in, a thing people do for fun. A thing that hopefully brings both authors and readers joy! The story an author posts a is a gift; how dare anyone rip a gift apart in front of the gift-giver and all the other party attendees? How entitled and ungrateful can you be? Fandom is not a frigging battleground where authors learn to harden themselves for war. It’s a hobby. Done out of love and enthusiasm.
Yes, some fanfiction writers (certainly not all!!) aspire to be original fiction writers. They may use fanfiction as a training ground. They may want or benefit from constructive criticism. Still, they have to ask. They have to start the conversation. I know (think?) it’s harder to find betas these days, but it’s always worth asking around if real critique is what you want. Put “concrit welcome and even begged for” in the author’s notes and hope someone takes you up on it.
Some fanfiction writers with original fiction aspirations still don’t want criticism about their fic. Fic may be their fun-writing outlet. It may be about instant gratification (and there’s nothing wrong with that; we’re not in the business of denying ourselves pleasure out of some moral superiority here. It’s fandom). It may be the place where they post to get around their fears of showing things to others. It may be the place they take risks they wouldn’t in their original work because the stakes are lower. When you work on your original writing all day, every day—often putting that work through far more vigorous and exhausting paces than fanfic sees—the last thing you want is someone showing up during your time off to point out a frigging comma splice or shift in POV.
The point is unless someone asks for critique, you don’t know what’s going on with them. Maybe fic is the only fun thing they have in their lives. Maybe they’re writing in a different language. Maybe they are 14. Or 82. Maybe they’ve never written fiction of any kind before and this is their baby step forward. Maybe fic is just escapism. Maybe they are depressed or anxious as hell and criticism is going to push them over an edge. Fandom belongs to everyone. Not just people deemed “good” or “perfect” or “permitted” or “thick-skinned.” People don’t need to be saved from grammar mistakes or poor turns of phrase or even plotholes so wide a semi could drive through them. Authors sure as hell don’t need to be told when a reader just doesn’t like something. There is no fandom police force in charge of perfection. If critique is so important to you, advertise your willingness to beta. If you do not like a story or think it’s “bad” hit the freaking back button.
Unsolicited criticism is not helpful. Maybe you just catch someone off-guard and startle them. At worst, you may totally shatter someone’s self-esteem while they are partaking in a hobby they 100% do for fun—and not in pursuit of some unattainable perfection.
Don’t ruin a stranger’s day or week or hobby because you “know better” and somehow think you need to prove it. You don’t.
This, and I’d add that this also counts for when you’re just writing an original fic for fun because you have a head full of ideas and characters and need to write about it. Sometimes we just write original fic for fun and because we love creating things!
I once wrote an original fic, for fun, it was a passion project, I didn’t plan on sending it to a publisher. I just had an idea for a story and wanted to share my brainchild with others.
The story was ripped apart by some arsehole who I never even asked for his opinion or his critique or whatever, he just came into the comments and wrote me an essay about all the things he thought I had done poorly with the story – the writing style, how the description was misleading him, that he didn’t like the characters, or the world building, how the story wasn’t “dark” enough …
I started hating the story. I felt forced to rewrite it, then abandoned and deleted it.
I wasn’t planning to make money with that story. I just wanted to share my brainchild with others. I didn’t ask for some arsehole to give me unwarranted critique.
Please, for the love of gods, don’t be that person. Unless someone asks for it, you don’t get to walk up to someone and shit all over their work. Because I’m telling you, that’s what it feels like. You’re not being helpful. You’re not doing them a favour. You’re just being an arse. And you could ruin someone’s love for writing.
When you write fanfiction, it’s easy to feel like you don’t get “enough” feedback and think that you’d feel happier and more confident about your writing if you got more. But in my experience, that’s not always true–I’ve seen people who went, “I only got 3 kudos, my last story got 5″ get more popular and then go, “I only got 300 kudos, my last story got 500.”
If you’re prone to doubting yourself and your work, getting more feedback will not magically fix it for you. You have to put a little work in to open yourself up to the possibility that your work doesn’t suck.
Ways I’ve found to feel better about the feedback you get:
Learn how to savour minimal feedback instead of dismissing it. It’s easy to dismiss likes or kudos as “meaningless”, but they still mean someone read what you wrote and enjoyed it enough to hit that button. This is corny, but: When I feel like crap, I go through my likes/kudos and thank everyone out loud by name. “Thank you, iguanaluvr. I’m glad you liked it. Thank you, rmb86. I’m glad you liked it. Thank you, tonysgirl, I’m glad…” Cultivating gratitude can lead to joy.
Convince yourself that your reviewers are real people. If you’re anything like me, in a bad mood you minimize the feedback you do get and think, “It’s not like their opinions are important, anyway.” Comments just get reduced to a number on a screen. Give that number weight and meaning by finding out who’s leaving them. Click through to the profiles of people leaving you comments, likes, and kudos. Do what you can to make them feel like other human beings in your mind, so their opinions hold more weight.
Build relationships with your frequent commenters. I sometimes feel weirded out and confused by people who actually like my work, and I’m tempted to back away slowly. If they like my work, can their opinions really be worth much? But that kind of thinking keeps me isolated. What brings me the most joy in fandom is friendship and connection, especially if I feel like I can contribute something substantial to the relationship. And if somebody likes your work, it’s probable that you two share interests and preferences. Consider asking your commenters questions about their tastes and interests, reading your commenters’ own fanworks, or following them back on Tumblr. This turns a comment email from someone else saying “This is great!” to that specific person, like Jen who loves your genre and has a grey cat, saying she really loved your story.
Another tip I like:
Look at how many hits you have on your story. Then imagine the same number of real people standing in a crowd in front of you.
Then you’re less likely to think, “My story only got 100 hits.” Instead, it becomes “Holy crap, 100 actual people clicked on my story.”