I'm glad you liked it. In my mind, one of the most interesting parts of an unlikely alliance is how those alliances are formed, which is why my story focused on that aspect.
Thanks for reading!
I'm really impressed with your dialog. You did a good job of making it flow naturally, and resisted the urge to have your characters spout exposition.
I struggle a little bit with the plot--it seems a little too convenient for both groups to get everything they ever wanted and become so powerful with such ease. Overcoming adversity gives the audience a chance to stand up and cheer for the protagonists, which is something we want to do.
You've got some interesting ideas here, but I don't think 1000 words was enough to develop them in. As it stands, this feels more like the genealogy chapters of Genesis than a completed story.
Something that may have helped would have been to tell the story from the molds perspective. The way it is right now, I'm missing a thread of continuity that would have helped to keep me engaged.
That's a fair note. I was experimenting with using strict first person, and wanted to take advantage of the ability to address the reader directly. In narrative, that was supposed to be the Guild Leader reporting to the other Dwarven Guilds, but I did a bad job of exposing that to anyone who isn't already in my head ;-
This was great! I love how you managed to figure out how to create an alliance without speaking.
One minor nitpick, I found this sentence confusing "
Others like the creature huddled together, strands of their being pulled away by the savage power of the voidgate". On careful inspection, it seems like you're using "being" as a noun, but when I first read it I thought you were missing a word (e.g. strands of their bodies being pulled away).
Great work as always.
So, from an intellectual perspective, I'm intrigued by your subversion of the "emotionless robot" trope. On the other hand, what you've ended up with is something basically unrecognizable to me. If you'd been able to contrast Crystal's behavior with other RL individuals, this could have been a way to make them an interesting individual, but as it is, I'm left without something that is recognizably OPR.
This was a fun submission to read (and congratulations on subverting my expectations for your setting--I was expecting Robot Legions and got Duchies instead).
One more round of proofreading would have made this a top contender in my mind. You've got some sentence fragments that broke me out of the story, unfortunately. Still, I really enjoyed this submission and am looking forward to seeing you participate in future writing jams.
So, I found your writing quite good from a technical level, but I ran out of suspension of disbelief when two armies that were literally in the act of fighting suddenly decide to be friends instead. Unlikely allies is a good thing, but unplausible allies requires more work on your part to help me accept.
This was a fun story, thanks!
I do think the adherence to theme was your weakest category. I definitely see how this does fit the theme of unlikely allies, but I wish it felt more like Grek and the foreman had worked together to get out of the cell. In this version of the story, it felt more like Grek escaped than the pair of them escaping.
I enjoyed your writing and am looking forward to more in future writing jams.
This was a very well written story. In only a few words, you managed to establish 5 different characters, and there's definitely enough here to expand into more stories in the future.
Unfortunately, I don't think it fits the theme very well at all. You have a single set of protagonists and a single set of antagonists, and both feel pretty monolithic. With more space to develop your characters, you might be able to make Donoghue and Fenton feel like unlikely allies, but all you've managed in the space given is to establish that they're not the best of friends.
Hopefully you join future writing jams, I really appreciated your writing ability.
That was fun! Just a couple of minor notes.
Your psuedo-terminal formatting, while thematic, made parts of the story much harder to read than necessary. Similarly, I'd recommend Italics rather than ALL CAPS for the robot dialog--all caps is surprisingly hard to read.
I also wish you'd managed to fit some of the actual working together into your submission, rather than just giving a footnote about it. The 1k word limit is pretty challenging, though, so I understand why that didn't happen.
Definitely one of the better submissions I've read so far!
I don't really see how this fits the theme. I guess you could say that the uprising slaves are an unlikely alliance, but that doesn't feel developed enough for me to give this very high marks on adherence to theme.
I'm also not really sure how this fits into OPR's universe. I assume (both from the title and the technology level) that this is supposed to be a Grimdark Future entry, but I don't recognize any of the factions in the story.
Thanks for submitting.
I like the idea of a military group rebelling against authority and working with the people they were oppressing. I wish you had gotten to that idea a little sooner, so we could see the effects of that alliance.
Unfortunately, it feels like your prose got in the way of the story you're trying to tell. Having just two long paragraphs left the whole thing feeling rushed, and you really could have done with a quick check for typos.
Thanks for submitting! I hope to read something from you again next time
I see two weaknesses in your story. First, it seems divorced from the Age of Fantasy setting--it mostly feels like you wrote a story about present-day high school and then palette swapped in some AoF trappings. Second, the ending felt forced; you don't win a fist fight in a ring by being a good strategist.
Your dialog was impressively natural, especially given the word count constraints. Thanks for sharing!
I like your story, and you definitely get props for actually making a coat of arms to accompany it!
I do think it would fit the theme a little better if Antonio had done something unexpected or clever--it kind of felt like he tried to do a straight up fight, then ran away when it turned out the enemy was stronger than him.
I loved it! I also disagree with those who don't see it following the theme - Estoria was very definitely playing the part of strength in the narrative.
My only nitpick is that you have a typo in the 6th paragraph of the second column, "Estoria moved a second pawn to capture the one Estoria put forward". I'm pretty sure that Estoria was capturing K-7S2's pawn, not their own ;-)
I wish you had done a lot less telling and a lot more showing.
Rather than telling me that the Orks are strong, give me a scene where an unyielding horde ignores their own losses and smashes through a defensive line. Instead of telling me that the Battle Brothers successfully set traps, explain how they pulled off an ambush, and the difference that makes.