Progress Report (02/12): Crazy Times

So, I missed the update last month. I missed this one by a day as well. Work in the two weeks surrounding the beginning of November was particularly insane, and eventually I’d missed the update so badly that I decided to just skip it entirely. As you might surmise, when I can’t even write updates properly, there’s hardly any work being done on the story. A little bit has happened, but it amounts to little more than a few hundred words and some notes, written one night when I couldn’t sleep right and had nothing better to do.

The reason is that I’m currently busier than ever. I keep saying that, and yet it’s still true. It’s just been ramping up steadily for a while. I already have trouble enough keeping up with work, so frankly, I’m in no state to be making any promises about how much I can work on the story for the next few months. The lore post that I was working on (“On ninja in modern society”) hasn’t been touched at all this past month.

The post, for those curious, includes one of the topics suggested in the comments two months back: ninja economics. In fact, it’s quite a bit broader than that. It covers the history and origin of ninja and their techniques, the rise of the ninja villages, the general internal organization of ninja villages (it differs a lot in specifics from village to village), general ninja village economics and culture, and finally various facts about the kinds of lives ninja lead and the roles they serve in society, both culturally, politically and militarily. The main focus is on Konoha as it’s the focus of the story and also the first, biggest and strongest ninja village around, but there’s also a bunch of information about the other villages since they’re each unique in their own interesting ways. It’s a big chunk of info, but it all fits in together so I’d rather not split off the currently finished parts and publish those separately.

I’ll work on it when I get the energy and time to do so, but since my plans of one lore post a month have already slipped so far, I won’t make any promises that I can’t keep. It will get there when it gets there. Right now I won’t commit to more than an update around this length every month.

That’s all for now. See you in the new year!

Progress Report (04/10): Slogging onwards…

Progress is, as ever these days, slow. Ever since my summer holidays were cut short by a month (eliminating exactly the time I’d planned to spend writing, and catching me off guard in the process) I haven’t really been writing well, or much, at all. The half-an-hour a day initiative I’ve tried hasn’t been working out very well. I only ever have time to write in the evenings, and evenings are strangely also the time of day when I am the most tired, after working all day. When I hear my alarm in the evening, I am rarely motivated enough to actually sit down and write something.

Write or Die does help – whenever I use it, stuff gets written. However, I find that I don’t use it very much, precisely because it is so punishing – which is its most obvious drawback. I will most likely continue using it occasionally, but sadly it’s not a catch-all solution for writing every day.

But enough about my problems.

So how are we doing?

The word count has increased by 1.592 words. That’s two hectic half-hour Write or Die sessions, plus miscellaneous. Words get deleted sometimes, too; the actual written word count is often larger. It’s not much, but it is a bit.

The next month…

Wait… what? Yes, you read that right: month. Progress is slow, and I am perpetually busy with work. Writing updates every two weeks means that nothing much happens every update. From now on, there will be longer updates every month instead, with hopefully larger progress increments to report. Right now I find myself recalling every other sunday evening, “oh, right, I have to post an update”, and then I spend a small while writing down the past two week’s progress. It’s haphazard and ad hoc, and I don’t like doing it like that.

I want to make a bit more out of them. I intend to spend a few days writing an update, instead, and mean to accompany each update with a lore post of some kind, however large or small that might end up being with the time allotted. If there are any topics that interest you in particular, say so in a comment, and I might just decide to make the post about that.

Updates will from now on post on the 1st of every month, whichever day that will happen to be. Comments on this decision are welcome, of course – I do listen to the ones who comment. If you appreciate the two-week update schedule a lot, drop a line, and I’ll definitely consider what you have to say.

Finally, thank you for reading, and remember to subscribe if you want to be kept up to date on IFF’s progress without having to remember to check back here occasionally. You will not be spammed; you will only get notifications when new content or updates are posted.

Progress Report (21/09): So conferences are tiring…

I’ve had a very eventful time since last update – but sadly, this means little has happened with the story.

This week, I attended Sweden Game Conference, to present a video game I’m working on. I spent the week before that preparing stable, playable builds of the game. A chinese publisher actually got excited about the game and decided to pick it up, and there’s been a bunch of negotiation and preparatory stuff there.

As you can hear, eventful week. But bad for writing.

So how are we doing?

It’s not outright catastrophic. I didn’t actually get my half hour in most days as I was just too busy in general and too tired in the evenings, but I did get some writing done. I’ve written almost a thousand words since last update. It’s not much, but it is at least something.

The next two weeks…

Now that Sweden Game Conference is in the past, things should hopefully slow down a little again. I’m sure more crunchy deadlines await in the future, but the immediate time ahead of me is clear. While at SGC, I saw Chris Avellone speak (he wrote for some of the best-written games out there, like Planescape: Torment – *fan squee*), and he strongly recommended something called Write or Die.

This is an app that will push you to write, or it will punish you by, for example, showing creepy pictures of spiders, playing unpleasant sounds and, oh, deleting what you’ve already written. If you do keep up, though, you will get pleasant sounds and backgrounds for writing. I’ve tried it, and it is utterly brutal. In the thirty minutes I tried, I pumped out 800 of the roughly 1000 words I wrote these past two weeks. It just completely freaked me out when the screen turned red and it started deleting text, but it was also pretty fun. The stuff I wrote definitely has to be edited, of course, since it was written under duress and in a darn hurry, but it’s getting the meat of the text written that’s hard.

I intend to combine my daily half hour – which I hope to be able to keep up better now there’s less stress at work – with this blessed tool of the devil, Write or Die. I shall report the results in two weeks.

Progress report (06/09): Slow weeks

This update will be short. Once again, work is getting in the way of writing, in addition to my being tired in general. I’m once again in trying-not-to-burn-out mode.

How are we doing?

Not well – I haven’t even been getting half an hour of writing done every day. Come evening, I’m generally too tired and worn out, and I often end up just going to bed instead of writing. So, boring non-update this week – I only wrote maybe 400-500 words total, in scattered bits that will have to be sorted out later.

I also finished played Life is Strange, which is a game I can very strongly recommend for those who are into story-based games and having their hearts broken. The after-effects of playing this game is partially responsible for me simply not being in the mood to write much these past two weeks.

The next two weeks…

I’ll continue trying to get in my half an hour every day, even though I may not succeed all the time. I think I will try to get more work done on a lore post, as a fallback if I can’t get into the writing mood more. This status quo is still much better, as occasionally I hit a good run and write several thousand words in one evening.

The long term future…

Finally, I just want to reassure you, my readers, that… well, while this may take a while, this will get written. If I’m still writing a decade from now, well… I will have done this very slowly, but I know that I will either be done or still going, one bit at a time.

In other news, I’m strongly considering taking a sabbath year soon, as all this relentless work and study is beginning to wear a bit on me. I know you don’t read this for an update of my personal life, but the relevant point here is that I will be trying to get more time off, and with that comes a very real chance for writing sprees that aren’t just hours or days long, but potentially weeks or months.

So let’s hope for that.

Progress report (23/08): The good and the bad

There are both good and bad news this week. The day after I posted my last progress update, I learned that I had a work deadline a week and a half later – so that was bad. Most days I was still working when my phone alarm started ringing, telling me I had to write my daily half hour. I did not get half an hour done on most days, but I overcompensated on other days and my average is probably pretty close to half an hour a day.

How are we doing?

The above might sound like an excuse building up to me saying that I didn’t actually write much, but the fact is that I still wrote almost 5000 words in the past two weeks, so it really did go pretty well anyway. Most of those words have been on Ignition 4, though Ignition 2 and 3 are still in very rough draft stages (there are still occasionally bolded bits saying “write x and y here“, but the meat of the chapters is there). The half-an-hour-a-day habit isn’t anywhere close to stuck yet, though, and I’ve pushed the daily time a bit back because I am always doing something every evening. So those are good news – writing is happening faster now than it has for a few months, and I’m hoping I can speed it up still more.

I’m afraid I haven’t gotten the time to work more on any lore posts, though it’s possible that I will find the time to finish one before the next update.

The next two weeks…

I will pretty much continue like I have since the last update, with the added benefit of not crunching to meet an unexpected deadline. It remains to be seen whether half-an-hour-a-day is a sustainable habit that I can keep up in the long run or whether I need to do longer but less regular sessions, but I’m sure going to give it a good, solid shot and try to change things around if it doesn’t appear to work. Hopefully I’ll have an even higher word count progress to report next time.

Until next time!

Progress report (09/08): Week of the procrastinator

Today is another not-too-lengthy update. The truth is that not much has happened at all. I’d like to say that I’ve been very busy, and while I could make a bunch of quasi-valid excuses, the truth is that I’ve had plenty of time to write this past week after I got home. I just didn’t really get it done.

How are we doing?

I wrote a paltry 327 words this week – one sit down of a few minutes one evening soon after I got home and started working again. So, we’re not that well this update – but at least it’s still something, and I’m still writing, however slowly. This is one for the long run, after all.

I did get one good review on fanfiction.net, and my (somewhat lengthy) reply to that will probably form the basis for part of the lore post on written seals at some point in the future.

The next two weeks…

I shall endeavor to build up a habit. I forgot that the key to writing enough (or doing anything enough) is building up a good habit about it. Just sitting down for at least half an hour a day at a certain time to try and write something will make sure that my mind stays on the business. However, building up habits is hard. Sometimes I can be a horrible procrastinator. I’m going to see what I can do about it, though – there is a bit more to that one specific skill than merely writing fanfiction, after all!

This blog is one good example of a habit that it appears I’m managing to maintain. I don’t pretend that a lot of people are reading it – IFF’s readership is after all rather tiny, and this blog’s readership so minuscule as to be practically non-existent, but it does have a value to me all of its own, despite of that.

For now, I’m simply going to try and consciously allocate a certain minimum daily slice of time, say 20:00 to 20:30 in the evenings to writing, and then freely let it extend past that if I can. We’ll see how that worked out in two weeks.

Until next time!

Progress report (27/07): A week of break, but still decent progress

Short update again this week. So, as mentioned last week, I had one entire week where I was unable to write at all. On the other hand, I climbed a mountain. Now, while I nurse my legs, I continue to write at an actually decent pace, for once.

So how are we doing?

I wrote 4721 words on Ignition 2.3 these past two weeks, in fact – most of it in the last two days, and the chapter is beginning to look a little more fleshed out. These were the times where I actually got to sit down and have a few hours of peace to write, so it appears that right now I’m perfectly capable of writing when the time and place is there.

I also spent a short while looking at a few lore posts, and I think it’s pretty likely that one of them is going to come out in these next two weeks.

I know that this pace is fairly slow, but things are getting done eventually. I’m trying to speed it up, but I’ve been travelling all over this past month and it’s been hard to establish any kind of routine. That should end soon, and we’ll see if that has a helpful effect on things.

The next two weeks…

In the next two weeks I will be heading back home and starting my studies again. My schedule will then stabilize greatly for a few months, with regular free time, so we’ll hopefully see a lot more writing out of me.

Remember to subscribe if you want to get these updates by email. There’s no need to register an account – all it takes is an email, and you’ll only be notified when there’s new content.

Meanwhile, stay tuned for more lore posts – odds are it’ll be the one about the world’s technology level and politics in general.

Until next time!

Progress report (13/07): Bijuu lore post is out, some story progress

So, I’ve had a pleasant two weeks. I must admit that I have succumbed rather more to the holiday spirit than I’d intended to, and have been spending a lot of time with my friends and family. Today will be a brief update, so let’s get to it – there are some good news this week!

So how are we doing?

The lore post on bijuu and jinchuuriki is finally done, and you can find it here. I think it turned out decently, though I wish I could have made it longer, as it currently only covers the absolute minimum. But there’s so much I could fill in, and I had to stop somewhere. The rest must be for other lore posts in due time. Otherwise, I’ve written only a paltry 1578 words on the story itself, due to the factors I mentioned above. I’ve really needed this break, and it’s been great to destress. The time I did use to write was mostly spent writing and polishing the lore post, simply because I could not stand to delay it any longer. And of course, there was the typical last minute panic-and-rewrite moment which added another five hundred words to the post.

The next two weeks…

Next week I should have plenty of time to write, truly. I now feel less shame re: unfinished lore posts. We’ll get there eventually, and one day the floodgates will open, I am sure of it. Until then,  I know the going is slow, so bear with me. Sadly, I do not anticipate getting much done in the second week, as there I have my final familial obligations to fulfill; a week long trip with the whole extended family. After that I have a month of holidays with no plans at all, so there is still plenty of time to write and really get into the meat of things.

Until next time!

Lore post #1: On the history of bijuu seals and jinchuuriki

This lore post was too long in the making. I know I’ve been talking about these lore posts for ages now, so I decided to make a bit of a push to get this one finished in time to go out just before the next progress update. The problem, I find, is primarily how the posts keep ballooning in size the moment I start writing them. It occurs to me that people are going to complain about canon rules and assumptions, when the matter of the fact is that IFF is simply different in most respects, and then I start explaining only peripherally related concepts, such as my very limited explanations of the workings of seals in this lore post.

Even though this lore post is 2.200 words long, I promise you that it is on the very small side, and has been kept virtually bare bones so that I could even finish it at all. There are many things which have not made it into this post, many points which could be expounded upon much further. However, for now, this must be it. I shall be happy to answer questions in the comments, and I hope you enjoy.


Here follows several excerpts of “Taming the Gods”, by Nara Kaede


This book will not touch on the origins of the bijuu, for their origins are unknown to us, more myth and legend than history. The tumultuous times that followed the Sage left little to examine for modern historians. Entire civilizations were lost to memory, leaving behind only scarce ruins and indecipherable writings. The events surrounding the coming into being of the greatest terrors this world has ever known are lost to us, as they were lost to our ancestors, who first had to contend with their existence.

The bijuu were natural disasters, pure and simple – their rage as indomitable and mindless as that of earthquakes and volcanoes, floods and famines. They could not be negotiated with. They could not be understood. They could not be fought, or even hurt. They struck randomly and without warning or reason before withdrawing once again to go into deep sleep. When they saw each other, they fought with an unparalleled rage until one was driven away to lick its wounds. And every time they appeared, whether they clashed with one another or struck alone, many thousands died. Often, people would pilgrimage to the places where one of the nine beasts chose to slumber, and offer up sacrifices to placate them so they would stay their anger for another year. They were like gods to our ancestors.

It is not an easy thing, to capture a god and bend it to your will. Yet that is what we have done, and that process is what I give an account of, in Taming the Gods.

[…]

The oldest seal array ever found dates to the first century AS. The oldest reference to a storage seal dates to the second century AS. It was not before the fourth century AS that the understanding of chakra seals advanced sufficiently: active chakra absorption arrays were invented, and for the first time in almost half a millennium, it became conceivable to do something about the bijuu.

In those times, it was the learned of the temples who were the masters of written seals. Nothing like the enormous, organized institutions which are so prevalent now existed then, but these sages were among the precursors of modern ninja. The Sōdaina Jigyō scrolls contain an account of the development of the first seal, describing it as a gathering of the wisest and most powerful temple sages in the world. Thousands answered the call, across religions and cultures and borders, spurred by the Kyuubi’s total destruction of the incredibly wealthy island nation and trade center of Tokushu, whose remnants came to be known as the Land of Whirlpools, and were the foundation for the modern city-state of Uzushio.

The development of the seal took years, and the structure that was erected to support the seal itself was enormous, with a warren of tunnels beneath it to contain the seal’s great chakra channels. Today, the Temple of the Eldest Flame lies in the same location, nestled in between the two easternmost peaks of the Kasai mountain range. But back then, the place had another function entirely: to trap, seal and contain the Kyuubi.

The trap took years to prepare, and required the cooperation of dozens of nations. It is a miracle indeed that it was allowed to be attempted at all, for the Kyuubi was woken on purpose and shepherded many kilometers to the location of the seal, which had been constructed dangerously close to its slumbering form. It followed its taunting attackers with the same mindless rage that it laid waste to so many nations with, and though countless people had to give their lives, the Kyuubi reached the temple and the seal was activated. Miraculously, it worked. The Kyuubi was sealed within the mountain.

That first seal would, in the end, not last for long. The incredible stresses which the Kyuubi put on it caused it to fail within a decade. But by then, half a dozen other such seal temples were already being constructed across the continent, their designs refined further with every new seal. The inevitability of the bijuu’s rage was no longer a given. For the beasts, it was already too late. Now they could be challenged. Now, they could be defeated. They have largely been in our power since.

[…]

The strength of the bijuu is unmatched in the world. Nothing can penetrate their hides, and nothing can withstand their rage. Mountains crumble and lakes evaporate before them. Even a thousand of the world’s most powerful ninja could never hope to match the sheer, raw power of a single bijuu, let alone a thousand sages six centuries ago. What, then, allowed them to trap a bijuu, despite being unable to match its power?

It is because, out of all of the creatures in the world, humans are without a doubt the most dangerous. We are, most of us, weak and fragile. We do not have fangs, nor claws, nor venom. But spears, swords, canals and cities do not grow on trees. You will not find a cow considering which alloy works best for forging a sword. Only the talking animal races truly share our intellect, but they do not share our mindset. Only humans have the intellect, the ambition and the arrogance to attempt to chain the forces of the world to our wills. No one but a human could ever conceive of attempting to tame a god, and then proceed to do it.

The design of the first bijuu seal was ingenious. The wise sages of the past knew that they could not ever hope to match their strength against a bijuu even in unison, and so they did not try. Instead, they turned its strength against itself. Its own chakra was absorbed and used to power the seal which trapped it and stored its form; the more it struggled, the more power it fed to its prison. Once the basic principle worked, one only had to construct a seal which could withstand channeling the enormous amounts of chakra which were necessary to contain something with the strength of a bijuu.

Chakra ink would not be invented for another century, and chakra-forged alloys were many centuries off; the seals of this age were built in stone and wood which was soaked in human blood. These seals did not channel chakra well compared to modern ones, and this necessitated the construction of the large temples. The Kōken’nin order was created and given the mandate to contain the bijuu. Within a mere few decades, all of the bijuu were sealed, and for centuries, the Kōken’nin built, maintained and protected the temples which contained the bijuu. As the centuries passed, the bijuu seals shrunk in size, until they could be forged in steel and contained within a single, large room at the center of the seal temples. Sometimes, accidents happened, and bijuu might break free for many years until they could be recaptured and safely contained again. Still, the world enjoyed an unprecedented time of peace from the rage of the bijuu.

It was in the city of Uzushio, in the Land of Whirlpools, once known as Tokushu, that the next step was taken. A new type of bijuu seal was devised by the seal masters of Uzushio, who were unrivalled in the world in their knowledge of the craft. This new seal supposedly allowed a bijuu to be sealed within a single person, relying upon their own internal chakra network to function and bear the strain of supporting it. When the Nibi broke free of its seal, this new seal was first used, without the knowledge of the Kōken’nin, and its host was brought to the Land of Whirlpools to be studied. It quickly developed that the great stress of supporting a bijuu seal turned the host irretrievably insane and rendered their chakra network virtually broken to them; utterly beyond use.

There were, however, benefits to the technique. For the first time, bijuu were portable, and Uzushio was quick to realize this. Uzushio had until then regularly warred with a neighboring city-state, Gotama, later to be the capital of the Land of Fire. Uzushio arranged to release the Nibi to rampage in Gotama, and the city suffered great damage before the Nibi left to seek a place for slumber. The Kōken’nin order was outraged to discover Uzushio’s scheme of harnessing the bijuu, and threw their whole-hearted support behind Gotama in the war that followed. By the end of the war, the city states surrounding Gotama had coalesced into a greater whole, the Land of Fire, in defense against the threat of bijuu attack. The Land of Whirlpools was subjugated, and made a vassal state of the rapidly growing Land of Fire.

For the Kōken’nin, it was already too late. As the nations realized what the development of the new bijuu seals meant, and the knowledge of how to create them spread, bijuu were seized from Kōken’nin temples across the world and sealed into hosts, which came to be known as jinchuuriki. The sacrifice of a single individual’s life and sanity was a small price to pay for wielding such power, after all, and the Kōken’nin’s selfless mission no longer held the same weight it once did. The order was largely dismantled, and many of its disciples and seal masters were eventually absorbed into the soon-to-be-formed ninja villages.

There was, of course, still far to go. Releasing a bijuu from a host inevitably meant the host’s death, as well as the death of anyone immediately nearby. Further, the seal was lost in the process, and a bijuu released somewhere would eventually have to be sealed again. To add to the difficulty, this was often deep in enemy territory, and offered the enemy a prime opportunity to catch a bijuu for themselves, should they be ready for the occasion. The nations which captured bijuu and used them most wisely grew greatly in this period – often entirely without the use of their bijuu, as the mere threat of their use was usually enough to cow individual city states into submission. The map grew to resemble something much more familiar to the modern reader, with five great powers possessing all nine of the bijuu.

An arms race began among the newly emerged great nations and their ninja villages, to create the most flexible and reliable bijuu seals. During the first great ninja war, a type of seal emerged which could withstand the process of unsealing and keep the host safe meanwhile, remaining inactive during the beast’s rampage, and then reactivating to assist with the beast’s resealing from inside, allowing a new dimension of flexibility in their military applications, while also letting the hosts retain their lives. During the second great ninja war, seals were used which were capable of resealing a bijuu entirely on their own, further increasing their possible uses. In the third great ninja war, refined versions of these seals were used by most sides, and it was only the Land of Fire which brought something entirely new to the table: a seal developed in Uzushio which allowed them – to a degree – to control the behavior of the beast while it was released.

Throughout the third great ninja war, the Land of Fire’s bijuu placement, usage and strategy was superb, and led to their alliance’s complete victory despite being heavily outnumbered in terms of beasts, due to the freedom, precision and speed with which they could deploy the Kyuubi. This was, of course, also helped along by the famous Fourth Hokage, Namikaze Minato, who often used his unique spacetime techniques to move Konoha’s jinchuuriki around the front at speed, or to make deep strikes without exposing Konoha’s own position unduly.

Fortunately for the other nations, there was a great public outcry during and after the third ninja war, due to the unprecedented casualties which were suffered due to the use of bijuu. Single cities had been destroyed by bijuu, but never before scores of them in quick succession, with casualties numbering in the millions. Today, the use of bijuu is scorned and greatly feared by the public. It is possible that their mere existence and demonstrated capacity to destroy is what now keeps the great nations from warring, lest another war as damaging as the last take place.

[…]

In many ways, bijuu have defined the past millenia of history. The world was once entirely subject to their actions, and their subjugation irrevocably changed everything, allowing greater and more prosperous nations to exist and flourish. The development of the human bijuu seal once again changed the world, revolutionizing the face of warfare to a degree which was only truly realized in the third great ninja war. It led to the balance of power which we know today, with the lands of Lightning and Fire largely dominant over Wind, Earth and Water due to their superior bijuu seals.

There are those idealists today who speak of abolishing the very concept of jinchuuriki and re-instituting the mission of the Kōken’nin order, and while it is no doubt philanthropically desirable, it is also a notion in vain. Power such as the bijuu’s is not easily cast aside, and those who choose not to capture and wield a bijuu are merely at a disadvantage to those who do, despite the distasteful sacrifices which are necessary. There can be no doubt; as the bijuu have dominated the past, so they will dominate the future.


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Progress report (29/06): Decent progress, more to come

The last two weeks have been a bit busier than I anticipated (aren’t they always), but I did still get more writing done than I have in quite a while. The first week of the holiday I just sort of crashed and did absolutely nothing productive whatsoever – a classic case of vegging out completely after being over-stressed for a while. This was obviously unplanned. The second week I spent moving around all over the place, before I finally settled down in Finland today to visit with family for three weeks.

This update is almost an hour late because I spent some time being distraught and later distracted by a certain failed rocket launch today, and then I fell into a blessed writing spell which I didn’t want to interrupt for anything. I should try making a habit of writing these updates earlier in the day.

So how are we doing?

The lore post “On the History of Bijuu Seals and Jinchuuriki” is currently sitting at around 90% completion, needing a bit of polish and review before I post it. It is an excerpt from the book, “Taming the Gods” by Nara Kaede. Another lore post which is written from an entirely OOC point of view, is about the general technology level and also contains general information about the world’s geography and rough international politics. It’s maybe a third done, and I’m still deciding what exactly to put into it, I intend it to be a basic primer on and overview of the more broad-sweeping changes that I have made to the standard Naruto canon. I’m also roughing out a potential structure for a post on ninja psychology and culture due to feedback from a reader, but I don’t want to get too distracted by all these lovely lore posts. We’ll see where that takes me.

In other news, the chakra post which has been languishing in development hell for a while now has been touched up a bit, but remains surprisingly stubborn and difficult to get right. I’m just not satisfied with the feel of it yet, and I might have to restructure a few bits. When I’m happy with it, or at least less miserable about it, I will post it.

So I got a bunch written on the lore posts. Now, how’s the story doing?

Not as well as I’d have liked, I’m afraid, but still a bit better than the former update. I’ve written a further 2731 words on Ignition 3 just this evening, bringing it up to a grand total of 4704 words. I’m now smack up against that difficult scene I talked about in the last update, and I think I’m going to simply write out a rough block-out draft without any actual prose and then leave it be for now.

I need to consider what will work best with that scene, as I would rather skip it entirely rather than do it badly. I realize I’m being hellishly vague, but I couldn’t say more without spoiling everything. You’ll recognize it when you see it. Meanwhile, my policy of not publishing before I’m done with the whole arc continues to grant me comfort and lets me skip difficult bits so that I can keep writing instead of blocking entirely, and get the meat of the arc done.

The next two weeks…

I’m going to have a lot of peace here in Finland to really get into the mood of it and whip my muse into shape. I anticipate getting a significant but unpredictable amount of writing done. Last time I wrote here in Finland, when at my best pace, I used to punch out between 5.000-10.000 words a day. I doubt I’ll quite get there, but even a fraction of that would be great.

Either way, I give genuinely good odds that you will finally see some of these darn lore posts I keep talking about in these next two weeks. It’s taken too long, but I think it’s about bloody time.

Now let’s squeeze that muse for all it’s worth. Until next time!