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| SFReader Forums > Writing > Juicy Rumors and Other News > Dragon Magazine | Forum Quick Jump
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|  Shade53 Acolyte

       Date Joined Jan 2005 Total Posts : 243 | Posted 11/28/2007 12:33 PM (GMT -5) |   | | was pointed to this article today and thought I'd pass it along -
3-6 cents a word - not so bad, giving all rights for 3-6 cents per word seems way out of line.
Currently Appearing
Upcoming Publications
In the Image of the Hanged Man - The Written Word
A Mother's Heart - The Written Word
Too Late for Ribbons - The Written Word
Pulling Threads - The Written Word
Moments - The Written Word
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  |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 5187 | Posted 11/28/2007 12:59 PM (GMT -5) |   | Dragon is now published by Wizard's of the Coast. It's changed a lot since the days when TSR published it.
I'm curious, folks. Dragon pretty much publishes the stuff that appeals to people that play AD&D. So which of you is going to write something like that then seriously want to hang on to the rights to say, an audio drama? Have you looked at what goes into the magazine? I'd have no problem giving them the rights, because I don't think I'd even want to try to market anything I'd sell them anywhere else. | | Back to Top | | |
  |  Bill Ward Biblioholic

       Date Joined Jul 2006 Total Posts : 1738 | Posted 11/28/2007 1:05 PM (GMT -5) |   | Well, it's apples and oranges, like Scalzi's suggestion writers were better off submiting to Realms, F&SF, etc. at the same price point -- that's like telling a rock'n'roller they're better off playing in the symphony -- different market needs, different audience, different skill sets. No one actually thinks Dragon Magazine and Realms of Fantasy publish anything like the same kind of fiction, do they? Scalzi seemed to.
From the perspective of a lot of people that want to have a career in the world of RPG products and freelance work the work-for-hire thing is standard, and a sale to Dragon magazine might actually get them noticed in that industry in a way a sale to a short fiction SF or Fantasy mag just can't do in the world of big publishing. Plus, my guess is a lot of the content of these stories, like characters, settings, etc., would be trademarked material, like fan fic, and this way I suppose the corporate guys can open up the world for people to play in without worrying about lawsuits.
The bad thing is it basically demarcates the borders of RPG world and commercial fiction world, as you aren't going to see talented people from the world of traditional publishing submitting material, you'll just have an rpg ghetto with the same names over and over again and no influx from writers outside. I think that aspect of it is a real shame, as it'd be great to have a talented fantasy writer submit a bit of adventure fiction to Dragon -- whose audience are probably big fans of non-licensed products from names like Jordan, Gemmell, Martin, Williams, etc. My guess is the fiction will have to be there to sell product anyway, so anything outside the narrow confines of the game world and the mechanics of D&D probably isn't going to find its way into the game's house organ. It isn't an independently run magazine anymore, but part of the WoTC product line. billwardwriter.com | | Back to Top | | |
   |  LWhittier Stablehand

       Date Joined Nov 2007 Total Posts : 12 | Posted 11/28/2007 1:55 PM (GMT -5) |   | | Eeenteresting. I used to read Dragon way back when -- some, oh, 10-odd years ago -- and it's good to see them reopening their doors. I don't know that I'll be subbing there anytime in the foreseeable future, but I don't see what Scalzi is getting so worked up about either. I agree with Bill's take on the whole thing: if you happen to write that kind of material, and you're willing to sell all rights understanding what it is you're doing, hey. More power to you. The magazine's not trying to hide anything; they've put their terms on the table. If you're okay with that, great. If not, don't sub there. But I can't imagine it hurts anyone to have a new market open. | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Shade53 Acolyte

       Date Joined Jan 2005 Total Posts : 243 | Posted 11/28/2007 2:49 PM (GMT -5) |   | I'd never heard of Dragon before being directed to this particular article. I know very little about the world of RPGs - I just thought it might be of interest. I, for one, can't imagine selling all rights to something I wrote - but I also don't like to write in other people's worlds.
~S ~Sarah Wagner~
Currently Appearing
Upcoming Publications
In the Image of the Hanged Man - The Written Word
A Mother's Heart - The Written Word
Too Late for Ribbons - The Written Word
Pulling Threads - The Written Word
Moments - The Written Word
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    |  Saanen Neophyte

       Date Joined Apr 2007 Total Posts : 172 | Posted 11/28/2007 6:10 PM (GMT -5) |   | | I would never sell all rights to any piece of original fiction, no matter how much I was offered. If the world and the characters are my inventions, I might want to write about them again.
Now, if I was writing in someone else's world with someone else's characters (and I cannot for one second imagine why I would want to do such a thing), that is a little different. But they would have to pay me a lot more than 3-6 cents a word even so.
Kate Shaw
"The King's Messenger" Renard's Menagerie #4 [forthcoming]
"Honeymoon" Desolate Places, Hadley Rille Books
"Sawmill Road," "Bad Luck," "How My Sister Lost the Game," Every Day Fiction
"Trompe L'Oeil" Staffs & Starships #1
"Sea and Sky" Black Dragon, White Dragon, Ricasso Press
"Final Episode" Triangulations 2007: End of Time | | Back to Top | | |
 |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 5187 | Posted 11/28/2007 7:30 PM (GMT -5) |   | Saanen said... I would never sell all rights to any piece of original fiction, no matter how much I was offered. If the world and the characters are my inventions, I might want to write about them again.
Now, if I was writing in someone else's world with someone else's characters (and I cannot for one second imagine why I would want to do such a thing), that is a little different. But they would have to pay me a lot more than 3-6 cents a word even so.
What you don't understand is that Dragon is a gaming magazine. Not just a fiction magazine. They're a gaming mag of a gaming company and anything that they publish in that magazine is going to be supporting, in some way, their games. Most stories are going to be based on their games, and probably concern the adventures of characters invloved in one of the RPG settings they publish. Most of the other stuff are going to be things like scenarios, characters, and so on... for their games.
Does R.A. Salvatore ring any bells? That's what they publish. So you write about the characters again. Guess who you're going to be selling the next story to, anyway? | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Saanen Neophyte

       Date Joined Apr 2007 Total Posts : 172 | Posted 11/28/2007 9:50 PM (GMT -5) |   | | I used to read Dragon Magazine when I was in middle school. I know all about it. I used to love the artwork in particular; I wish I'd saved my old issues.
That doesn't change my opinion that they don't pay enough for all rights. But certainly don't let that stop you if you want to write a story and give it away for pizza money.
Kate Shaw
"The King's Messenger" Renard's Menagerie #4 [forthcoming]
"Honeymoon" Desolate Places, Hadley Rille Books
"Sawmill Road," "Bad Luck," "How My Sister Lost the Game," Every Day Fiction
"Trompe L'Oeil" Staffs & Starships #1
"Sea and Sky" Black Dragon, White Dragon, Ricasso Press
"Final Episode" Triangulations 2007: End of Time | | Back to Top | | |
      |  Daniel Carl Jung's Waterboy

       Date Joined Aug 2003 Total Posts : 4515 | Posted 11/30/2007 5:39 PM (GMT -5) |   |
Jordan Lapp said...I remember that story too!!!
LOL, you wouldn't happen to have a copy of that issue lying around?
I did notive that Ad&D online has a lot of old stuff, but not fiction, from Dragon Mag archived as pdf's on their site.
Old modules, too.
And old rules editions.
"Art is the celebration of the ego's destruction."
Daniel | | Back to Top | | |
  |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 5187 | Posted 12/1/2007 3:15 AM (GMT -5) |   | | | |
  |  narrativium Stablehand

       Date Joined Oct 2006 Total Posts : 12 | Posted 12/4/2007 7:22 AM (GMT -5) |   | | crystalwizard: both the sjgames magazines state in their "writing for us" pages that they explicitly don't accept submissions of fiction or poetry. | | Back to Top | | |
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