CHAPTER 11 PROGRESS:
Stage: First draft
Word Count: 5,015
Boo! Hope I didn't shock you with this startlingly sudden and timely post.
CHAPTER 7 PROGRESS:
Stage: First draft
Word Count: 7,816
Turns out a lot can happen between blog updates, huh?
CHAPTER 7 PROGRESS:
Stage: First draft
Word Count: 5,173
Hey there! How's it going? c:
I wanted to make a progress report on where writing has been. So, if you compare 7's progress here to that of the previous blog post, it doesn't look like it's moved much. This is because I'm actually working on a new short story, as part of a collaborative project hosted by Fimfiction's Fallout: Equestria group!
CHAPTER 6 - PART II PROGRESS:
Stage: First draft
Word Count: 3,501
CHAPTER 6 PROGRESS:
Stage: Part 1: 90%, Part 2: 40%
Word Count: 10,266
So I'd planned to make an April Fools Day post that pranked you into thinking OSha was going to be cancelled... but ultimately I couldn't bring myself to do something like that. Instead, have a new piece of art!
Just in case you missed it, OSha's first chapter has been fully rewritten and revised, and the changes are now live! There is only one significant change, but it is important enough that I recommend checking it out. The second chapter will be along as fast as I can manage, and then the beginning will be all sealed up and I can devote all my time to Chapter 6.
I also commissioned a scene from the rewrite!
On July 27th of 2016, a few months after completing Fallout: Equestria, I jotted down a mental image of a Steel Ranger lost in a swamp. I then discovered FiMFiction and the burgeoning sub-fandom for FoE, and knew I wanted to take this idea and turn it into a story. After developing it into draft and receiving positive feedback from others (even an interested Kkat), Fallout: Equestria - Of Shadows was published on October 23rd, 2016.
CHAPTER 6 PROGRESS:
Stage: First draft
Word Count: 1,514
How about that fifth chapter, huh? Hopefully you now understand why it took so long; it was about the length of two chapters, but I didn't feel right splitting it apart. In the end I'm quite satisfied with the end result, and I really have Typoglyphic to thank for helping out near the very end.