Creative Writing Contest: Now with more prizes!

We launched the Creative Writing Contest one month ago. Iā€™m sharing:

  • A brief summary of how itā€™s gone so far (including a new update, which is why Iā€™ve changed the original publication date to 10ā„14)

  • A few updates that we hadnā€™t announced yet

The stories so far

Weā€™ve had 44 submissions (defined as ā€œposts with the contest tag + recommendations on the submission thread + private submissionsā€).

As a judge, Iā€™m trying not to read anything until the judging process begins, and Iā€™veā€¦ almost succeeded. (I check r/ā€‹rational more days than not, so the ā€œsee story, read storyā€ instinct is powerful.)

But you, reader, are not bound by this limitation! I envy your ability to click the contest tag, find an interesting title, and dive in.

You could also be contrarian and look for the least interesting title. Maybe youā€™ll find a hidden gem.

Thereā€™s still time to submit!

You have until 11:59 pm PST on October 29th.

Submissions donā€™t have to be long. I can easily imagine a 500-word entry (flash fiction, a well-done thought experiment...) winning a prize.

Updates on the contest

More prizes

Thanks to a generous donation from Owen Cotton-Barratt, weā€™ve increased the total prize amount from $10,000 to $22,000! More details here.

Private submissions

Several authors made the point that ā€œpublish your story on the Forumā€ is a steep requirement for someone who might want to sell that story somewhere else. So we opened the option to submit something privately, to be published only if you win.

Judges

At present, our judging panel consists of:

  • Kelsey Piper, writer at Future Perfect and The Unit of Caring

  • Alexander Wales, author of Worth the Candle and other EA-adjacent fiction

  • DaystarEld, author of Pokemon: The Origin of Species and host of the Rationally Writing podcast

  • Aaron Gertler, who mostly writes procedural Forum posts (but reads a lot)

One or two more people may join later.

Weā€™ll split submissions between the judges to keep the workload manageable. Each judge will recommend a few favorites to the rest, and weā€™ll work out the final winners via discussion.

Feedback

This isnā€™t really news, but itā€™s a reminder: I offer feedback on Forum posts, including entries to this contest. Iā€™ve already talked to a few people who wanted to know whether their work was a good fit, and Iā€™d be happy to help you.

(If you end up submitting something Iā€™ve seen, Iā€™ll make sure it goes to another judge.)