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The Genre is the story’s overall theme or prevailing tone. This refers to the story as a whole, not to specific elements within the story. A dramatic story can have humorous elements but still be a drama overall. Here are some brief descriptions for each genre:
This is simply the time span your story covers. An alternate version of DH covers seventh year. A complete canon retelling covers all seven years and possibly pre- and post-Hogwarts, as well. A missing moment occurs in the year for which it is a missing moment. Stories in which the timeframe is irrelevant or is an intentional mystery use ‘moot’.
Most fanfic by nature changes canon events. “First point of canon divergence” refers to the time at which a story first changes canon. An alternate seventh book first changes canon in seventh year – up to that point, it uses the canon story exactly. A retelling of the entire series changes canon either before Harry goes to Hogwarts or during the time covered by the first book (SS/PS). A post-DH story that disregards the epilogue changes canon events after Harry leaves Hogwarts, which is referred to as “DH – epilogue” on the site. The only stories that do not change canon events are missing moments and post-Hogwarts stories which conform to JKR’s epilogue.
An attribute is a plot element within a story. Basically, what types of things happen in your story? Here are some brief descriptions for each attribute:
Warnings are intended to inform readers of certain plot elements prior to their reading of the story. This allows a reader to avoid a story if s/he does not want to read the content in question. Here are some brief descriptions for each warning:
If you’re writing dark fiction, you don’t have to simply label it as such. Instead, use the existing genres, attributes, and warnings to show why it is dark. A good start might be the Tragedy or Horror genres.
Two reasons.
Your request will be sent to the admins for processing. Once your status is in place, you will be able to see unpublished original fiction on the story lists and in search results.
Important: Authors who post original fiction on Metafic may also be trying to publish their stories at magazines or online publications. To make it possible for them to do this, we have to make sure that original stories aren't "publicly available" -- that is, they can't be visible on a Google search or by someone who's just surfing the Web. If they were, then magazines would refuse to publish them. That's why these stories are viewable only to Authenticated Readers.
By joining the "Authenticated Readers" group, you agree that you won't copy any part of the stories, or discuss them anywhere except in comments made on Metafic itself.
The Metafic/Cracked Muggle administrators invite people to be judges based on one of two key criteria: (a) they are an author of note in our opinions, or (b) they are a reviewer that goes above and beyond by at least an order of magnitude.
Weve asked people to participate as a judge in general, knowing that for specific challenges they might either be unable to judge due to lack of interest (or time), or else they might be barred due to having a submission for that particular challenge.
The judging process uses a points-based system, much like the peer-review process for scientific publications. Unlike those publications, however, we have some hard and fast break points that will be evaluated. The scale of judging per entry is based on the following set of discrete choices:
Each story is rated by each judge in whatever categories are requested. Judges are not required to give any particular scores: there may be no fics worthy of a 4 or 5 score, or there may be several. This metric is a score, not a rank in any way. Most stories could be considered as starting at the value 3, then increasing or decreasing as needed. Stories with a few errors might receive a 2, while unreadable stories might receive a 1. Stories that are excellent but not perfect might receive a 4. Only a small percentage of fanfic stories should receive a score of 5, and they should represent the very best of the genre in question. Stories scored at 5 should be technically superior with excellent prose, solid characterizations, and a very engaging plot and/or premise.
In the case of a tie among entries, there is one recused judge who is normally non-voting and is also not allowed to submit an entry for judging (any judge may submit an entry and receive reviews, but they cannot be voted on). This recused judge is there for moderation in the case of questions about entries following the rules, as well as casting any tie-breaking vote. The only time the recused judge may vote is in the case of a tie: in that case the recused judge votes only to break the tie and does not vote on the other stories in the challenge. When any voting judge has a question or concern, their first point of contact should always be the recused judge.
Any score of 1 automatically renders the entry ineligible to win anything. If any judge truly feels that strongly about a work, there must be something wrong with it. Upon receipt of any 1 vote, the mediating judge may opt to instigate a dialog if it seems particularly out of alignment with other votes. The objective is not to change the vote but to ensure that sound reasoning lies behind it and no bias or mistake was made.
In terms of the criteria, judges currently rate each challenge entry on two metrics:
The key aspect to the second category is that it cannot exist outside of the first category. Any entry that fails on the technical aspects cannot win in the second category. That said, from a collection of many entries that do conform to the expectations, there may be one story that is best overall in quality of work, while a separate story may stand out for particular novelty or insight on the part of the author.
The purpose of the CM challenges is only partially about a given theme or topic; for the most part, the challenges exist to encourage the author to do something they would not otherwise do. This translates to advancing their mechanics, grammar, plot elements, ability to characterize, and so forth.
To that end, we ask all judges to do two things:
The mediating judge tallies all votes and announces the final numeric score results to all judges. In the case of a tie, the mediating judge may ask for a dialog of consensus or simply cast a tie-breaking vote without discussion. Upon request, the mediating judge must email to all the judges the anonymized scores received along with their point tallies from each judge. If there is concern remaining over the scores or final results, the mediating judge turns over the original emails to the Metafic site owner for verification purposes only.
When each challenge has been fully judged, the mediating judge or a non-competing administrator will announce the results as well as the list of judges who participated in that particular challenge evaluation.
Your request will be sent to the admins for processing. Once your status is in place, you can post your story using the instructions below.
Follow the same procedure you would for fanfiction (above), but for the Story Type, Timeframe, and Canon Compliance properties, choose "Original Fiction."
Note: If you are posting a story which you might want to publish at any point, check the box marked "Private" on the Submit Story page. If you do not, your story may be ineligible for formal publication, because editors might consider it to have already been made available to the general public. If you are sure that you will never seek to publish a given story, you do not need to check the 'private' box.
Metafic does not require any shipping in posted stories. When used, romantic relationships must match those in canon. They should either match canon during the story’s timeframe (i.e. Harry and Cho during part of OotP), or they should ultimately match JKR’s established permanent relationships. For the site’s purposes, “canon” refers only to material contained in the seven novels; the information revealed in JKR’s interviews, articles, and other sources need not be considered canon. The site admins reserve the right to change this policy.
If your main character is not on the list of available characters, you have two choices:
If you are writing about an obscure or original character, use the 'other' option. If you think that you or another author might write additional stories about the same character, then feel free to request an addition to the list.