coalcube: (Default)
coalie ([personal profile] coalcube) wrote in [community profile] coaltide2023-09-17 01:42 pm
Entry tags:

C-c-c-c-c-coal bomb!

Surprise, bitch.

Special: Feedback on matching poll

Nominations: Monday 18 to Thursday 28 September (Coordination | Evidence Post)
Sign-ups: Friday 13 to Saturday 21 October (NYR | Promo Post)
Assignments Out: Monday 23 October (may be earlier)
Default Deadline: Monday 11 December
Assignment Deadline: Monday 18 December
Main Collection Opens: Monday 25 December
Madness Opens: Tuesday 26 December
Author Reveals: Monday 1 January


Yuletide Discord for Hippos & Exchanges After Dark Discords for Namespace drama 18+ discussion. Google Group for PHs.


Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
OP

I definitely don’t write all the treats I mean to, per my last sentence! I was just wondering if people are like “oh god, there’s X again this year asking for that terrible prompt no one wants” (the one I’m thinking of redoing is in a perennial Yuletide fandom), because it always feels like there are a lot of participants who track that stuff much more closely than I do.

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 01:37 am (UTC)(link)
I was just wondering if people are like “oh god, there’s X again this year asking for that terrible prompt no one wants”

This is unhealthy. Please just ask for what you want.

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 06:29 am (UTC)(link)
I think the only time that would happen if it was something that was already noticed as a terrible prompt the *first* time around.

Like if you ended up on the pinch hits list because your only prompt for every fandom was brother/sister, DNW incest, DNW AUs, and then you did it again the next year, people would probably wank on here about you doing it again. But if a prompt wasn't stand-out terrible the first time around nobody would care, okay prompts don't become terrible with repetition.

(I've definitely seen people whine on coal that the person they try to game away from keeps requesting their favorite fandom every year, but I don't think having a different prompt for the same fandom would satisfy those most of those people, and anyway you shouldn't let picky people whining on coal scare you away from requests you love.)

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 03:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I asked on here because coalies pay way closer attention than I do to this stuff and I wanted to make sure I wasn’t breaking some kind of unwritten etiquette I hadn’t picked up on. I did ask for a rarepair three years running in a different perennial YT fandom, and finally decided if I hadn’t been treated by now no one was into my idea, so I’m trying to avoid that again.

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 04:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think it's necessarily true that because you don't get treated several years running, you should give up on a prompt - the point of a prompt isn't to get treated, it's to help your assigned writer, and most people don't get any treats most years (even in relatively popular fandoms.) If you think you'd still like the story, you should still put it in hoping for a match.

But a request where all you ask for is a rarepair is going to be a tough prompt anyway. The prompt it hurt me the most to give up on was a rarepair of my heart request where I even gave them a gen out that I'd be happy for any fic about the two requested characters interacting, romantic or not, and two years running I got the most awful stilted things in which the two characters sure had a conversation for sure, the weather's real nice isn't it.

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 04:48 pm (UTC)(link)
You're definitely not breaking any unwritten etiquette either way! If you want something, it's absolutely fine to keep asking for it, as many years in a row as you still want it; if you want something but are tired of not getting it and feeling bummed about it, and want to switch it out for a new request, that's absolutely fine also.

However, IME, this:

I did ask for a rarepair three years running in a different perennial YT fandom, and finally decided if I hadn’t been treated by now no one was into my idea, so I’m trying to avoid that again

is not a productive approach to take to getting treated or having your rare requests filled. As another coalie mentioned, not that many participants actually get treats in any given round of an exchange, Yuletide included, so relying on receiving a treat to tell you whether people are interested in your requests seems misguided to me? If one of your fandoms is never ever getting offers, I can see where you'd consider dropping it because no one else seems to be into it (though there's no actual reason not to keep asking for it in that case either) - but if you're matching on other fandoms and just not ever receiving a treat in the ones you aren't matching on ... that's p much "experiencing a normal Yuletide", I think.

Re: when do you give up on a request?

(Anonymous) 2023-09-25 07:13 pm (UTC)(link)
+1

Not getting a treat for a particular prompt isn't an indication of people's feelings, it's just the likely statistical outcome.