Well, it's almost that time of year again already, and is technically the first week of "preptober." As before, Bay12 is pretty slow these days so it may end up just being me talking to myself, but I'll post weekly updates as I go.
In case you aren't familiar with NaNoWriMo:
What is NaNoWriMo?NaNoWriMo is an informal challenge to anyone who wants to write. The idea is simple: you simply have to write 50,000 words of a story during the month of November. You don't necessarily have to finish the story, so long as you write that many words, and it doesn't matter
what the story is. This isn't going to be published anywhere without you doing it, so it can be fanfiction for all that the challenge cares.
The point is to just get words down. A lot of writers agree that this is the hard part, and you can easily get stuck trying to edit or world build. From experience, I can say that it's very true, and anyone who wants to give this a shot is strongly encouraged to not fret about the quality of your work and just focus on getting a first draft down. I did last year and hate how it turned out, but I'm still glad I did it since it puts me in a better place to try it this year.
Is this a competition?Not really. You're only challenging yourself. You can certainly compare your progress to others, but it's informal and you won't get anything but a warm, fuzzy feeling for beating someone else.
Is my writing safe?Sure. You don't have to publish anything you write, and nanowrimo.org just has a tool for inputting word counts. They have a word count utility as well, which supposedly scrambles the text so that nobody could possibly steal it, but in seriousness there's no reason to be afraid of whatever you're writing getting out in the wild without you doing it.
Can I win anything?Only personal satisfaction, which is a surprisingly good thing in my experience. Supposedly you can get some discounts on software or other sponsored goodies if you "win" by hitting 50K words, but I don't actually know how this works.
Can't I just cheat and enter whatever I want in the word count tool then?Sure, but you're only cheating yourself in the end. The whole point is to make something of your own and prove to yourself that you can do it.
Official website:https://nanowrimo.org/Links to previous years:202120202019201820172016201520142013 2012201120102009
I've been doing NaNoWriMo for a few years now and ironically I think only the first year that I did it led to anything that really felt satisfying at all, even if I ran out of story ideas near the 50K word mark and never finished it. Every year after that has been easier on a technical level as I've gotten used to the writing, but less satisfying with the end results.
To help combat that, I've spent time writing a few stories during the year to help shake out plots and prepare for NaNoWriMo, with the plan of redrafting them and fixing problems I found. I haven't decided for sure which I'll go with, but had a few ideas. Most likely I'll go with the story I've been working on the past few months, which was a futuristic fantasy story about space farers who find the first known alien space station and as a result the answer to the Fermi paradox: where are all of the aliens? Magic allows FTL space travel, but also allows... certain self destructive possibilities for civilizations.
Failing that, I may try to redraft one of my stories from previous years. The idea of rewriting last year's story from the perspective of the main villain's depressed assistant is appealing, even if I don't think the story will really work from her perspective. Or I could fall back to a couple of years ago with the sapient dragons in the undead apocalypse. I don't have a great second half for that story yet, so probably not.