News Archive

  • 184 weeks
    MSPiper’s “Autumnfall Change” [Royal Canterlot Library]

    You might want to keep a whiteboard handy for today’s story.


    Autumnfall Change
    [Sci-Fi][Slice of Life][Human] • 8,419 words

    Magic and technology may have pierced the void and blazed a path between the realms, but that was the simple part. Adjusting to the changes that follow can be far more daunting.

    Yet despite the complexities involved even in basic communication, Serendipity has found friends to talk to among humankind who can cheer her up when she’s down. And occasionally inspire her to bursts of ingenuity unhindered by such trifles as foresight.

    Read More

    6 comments · 9,188 views
  • 199 weeks
    TCC56's "Glow In The Dark, Shine In The Sun" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    A villain might just have a bright future in today's story.


    Glow In The Dark, Shine In The Sun
    [Equestria Girls] [Drama] [Slice of Life] • 27,035 words

    Despite all attempts, Cozy Glow still hasn't been shown a path to friendship. No pony has been able to get through to her, and she's only gotten worse with each attempt.

    Reluctant to return the filly to stone again, Princess Twilight has one last option. One pony she hasn't tried. Or in this case? One person.

    Sunset Shimmer.

    Can Sunset do what no pony has been able to?

    Read More

    10 comments · 9,383 views
  • 201 weeks
    The Red Parade's "never forever" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story never says never.


    never forever
    [Sad] [Slice of Life] • 1,478 words

    Lightning Dust will never be a Wonderbolt. When she left the Academy, she swore she'd never look back. When the Washouts disbanded, she swore she'd forget about them.

    Yet after all these years, against all odds, she finds herself here. At a Wonderbolts show. Just on the wrong side of the glass.

    Read More

    20 comments · 8,187 views
  • 206 weeks
    Freglz's "Nothing Left to Lose" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Don't lose out on today's story.


    Nothing Left to Lose
    [Drama] [Sad] • 6,367 words

    Some things can't be changed.

    Starlight believes otherwise.

    FROM THE CURATORS: One might be forgiven for thinking that after nine years of MLP (and fanfic), there's nothing left to explore on such well-trodden ground as changeling redemption — but there are still stories on the topic which are worthy of turning heads.  "Though the show seems to have moved past it as a possibility, the question of whether and how Queen Chrysalis could be reformed alongside the other changelings still lingers in the fandom's consciousness," Present Perfect said in his nomination. "In comes Freglz, with a solidly reasoned story that combines the finales of seasons 5 and 6 and isn't afraid to let the question hang."

    Read More

    26 comments · 7,593 views
  • 208 weeks
    Somber's "Broken Record" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story puts all the pieces together.

    (Ed. note: Some content warnings apply to this interview, regarding current world circumstances and mentions of suicidal ideation.)


    Broken Record
    [Drama] [Slice of Life] • 7,970 words

    There has never been an athlete like Rainbow Dash. The sprints. The marathons. The land speed record. She held them all.

    Until she didn't.

    Until she had only one left... and met the pony that might take it from her...

    Read More

    11 comments · 5,392 views
  • 210 weeks
    jakkid166's "Detective jakkid166 in everything" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Missing out on today's story would be a crime.


    Detective jakkid166 in everything
    [Comedy] [Human] • 15,616 words

    "Every pony thing evre made would be better if it had me in it."
    - me

    I, Detective jakkid166, will be prepared to make every pony fanficion, video, and game better by me being in it. All you favorite pony content, except it has ME! And even I could be in some episodes of the show except cause the charaters are idiot I'm good at my job.

    The ultimate Detective jakkid166 adventures collection, as he goes into EVERYTHING to make it good.

    Read More

    171 comments · 9,659 views
  • 212 weeks
    Mannulus' "Sassy Saddles Meets Sasquatch" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story is a rare find.


    Sassy Saddles Meets Sasquatch
    [Comedy] [Random] • 5,886 words

    The legend is known throughout Equestria, but there are few who believe. Those who claim to have seen the beast are dismissed as crackpots and madponies. Those who bring evidence before the world are dismissed as histrionic deceivers. There are those who have seen, however -- those who know -- and they will forever cry out their warning from the back seats of filthy, old train cars, even to those who dismiss them, who revile them, who ignore their warnings unto their own mortal peril.

    "The sasquatch is real!" they will cry forevermore, even as nopony believes.

    But from this day forward, Sassy Saddles will believe.

    Read More

    16 comments · 6,230 views
  • 213 weeks
    SheetGhost’s “Moonlight Vigil” [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Take a closer look into tonight’s story.


    Moonlight Vigil
    [Tragedy] • 3,755 words

    Bitter from her defeat and exile, the Mare in the Moon watches Equestria move on without her.

    Read More

    1 comments · 4,878 views
  • 216 weeks
    Unwhole Hole's "The Murder of Elrod Jameson" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story is some killer noir.

    [Adult story embed hidden]

    The Murder of Elrod Jameson
    [Dark] [Mystery] [Sci-Fi] [Human] • 234,343 words

    [Note: This story contains scenes of blood and gore, sexuality, and a depiction of rape.]

    Elrod Jameson: a resident of SteelPoint Level Six, Bridgeport, Connecticut. A minor, pointless, and irrelevant man... who witnessed something he was not supposed to.

    Narrowly avoiding his own murder, he desperately searches for help. When no living being will help him, he turns to the next best thing: a pony.

    Read More

    14 comments · 5,363 views
  • 218 weeks
    Grimm's "Don't Open the Door" [Royal Canterlot Library]

    Today's story lingers like the curling mist in a dark forest.


    Don't Open the Door
    [Dark][Horror] • 13,654 words

    After an expedition into the Everfree Forest ends in disaster, Applejack and Rainbow Dash take refuge in an abandoned cabin until morning.

    This is probably a poor decision, but it's only one night, after all. How bad could it be?

    FROM THE CURATORS: "I don't care much for horror stories," AugieDog mused. "But this one does so much right, I found myself really impressed." Present Perfect thought it was "simply one of the best horror stories I've ever read," and Soge agreed "one-hundred percent" that "this is pitch-perfect horror from beginning to end."

    Read More

    8 comments · 4,683 views
May
18th
2018

Author Interview » AdmiralTigerclaw's "Arrow 18 Mission Logs: Lone Ranger" [Royal Canterlot Library] · 1:33pm May 18th, 2018

Today's story arrives from the past to look at the future.


Arrow 18 Mission Logs: Lone Ranger
[Adventure] [Sci-Fi] [Human] • 66,605 words

The star system Omega Centauri was just another oddity on a map to scientists in the not too distant future. However when they found the star was orbiting an earth-sized, earth-like planet instead of a black hole as its motion had suggested, a mission was scrambled to investigate this most unusual of celestial behaviors.

Hamstrung by politics, and nearly crippled before it began, the 'Lone Ranger' mission was reduced to just one crew member and left to his own devices.

These are the logs of Arrow 18 and its lone commander. This information is classified TOP SECRET by the Global Space Agency.

Do NOT tell the princess.

FROM THE CURATORS: "What we have here," Horizon said when nominating this story, "is an early-fandom classic HiE (first chapter publication date: 2012), but with a twist: the HiE arrives not via handwavey magic but on a spaceship from 23rd-century Earth. What follows is a curious blend of standard HiE tropes, science-fiction first contact, unique Equestrian science worldbuilding, and a very pony story of friendship across a language and culture barrier."

This reflection of ponyness and humanity was a common theme in our discussion. "The thing that really wowed me," Present Perfect said, "is that this is a story about humans meeting ponies for the first time, where we, the reader, learn about ourselves through the eyes of ponies, through the eyes of the human protagonist. This weird feedback loop of discovery was really what kept my spirits high through the whole story, regardless of what was going on." "The ponies' reactions to a benign alien all ring true," FanOfMostEverything added while Soge said, "I was just left with this pure, wholesome feeling inside at the end, just glad to see the characters' relationships progress to that point."

Soge went on: "Most of all, this is HiE without all those typical HiE pitfalls: The protagonist is witty but never annoying; he sees the ponies as equals; and most importantly, it does all that without a speck of the misanthropy that seems to plague even the best examples of the genre." And that, FanOfMostEverything concluded, makes it "a very pony story in terms of its central message."

Read on for our author interview, in which AdmiralTigerclaw discusses conceptual thunderstorms, strange nostalgia, and the curse of cursive.


Give us the standard biography.

I grew up on the north side of Austin, Texas. A more or less typical sci-fi geek and partial shut-in by any standards. In 2010 to 2014 I attended ITT Technical Institute in Austin and earned my Bachelors in Electrical Engineering and Communications Technology. Along the way, I’ve learned to write music by ear using midi software interfaces, and have geeked-out on all things aviation and aerospace.

How did you come up with your handle/penname?

The Wing Commander Movie from the late 90s, early 2000s. The TCS Tiger’s Claw. I compacted it into ‘Tigerclaw’ and stuck ‘Admiral’ on the front. There may or may not have been some involvement in the name pick from playing Stellar Frontier at the time. I can’t remember if it did influence it or not. That was a long time ago.

Who's your favorite pony?

Chrysalis, actually. I’m a logical person and difficult to offend, making me good around people with otherwise abrasive personalities (such as the down-side mood swing of Bipolar Disorder). Such a temperament makes me feel like I’d make a good ‘Straight Man’ to Chrysalis’ emotional outbursts and bouts of superiority complex (I’m surrounded by idiots!).

What's your favorite episode?

I don’t have a favorite. In terms of writing, nothing’s really ever stuck with me enough that I would choose to watch it over any of the others. ‘Luna Eclipsed’ and ‘Lesson Zero’ are two I would jump to for a laugh first, however.

What do you get from the show?

Humor. And a strange nostalgia. The character set often reminds me of Sailor Moon in the interactions between the main cast. I may also enjoy cuteness a little more than is considered healthy by your average overly macho male member of society. MLP seems to roll the kind of feel of a 90s anime and an entire cast of cute mascots into one box.

What do you want from life?

A sack full of hundred dollar bills. They key to the White House, and the answer to who shot Kennedy. (This answer was prepared by ‘Standard Answers Incorporated’. Standardizing all your answers since forever.)

Why do you write?

Hilariously enough, I used to hate writing when I was young. Hand-writing made my hand cramp up as I would grip the pencil with the force of a workbench vice. Also made my handwriting atrocious, and the speed was garbage. Also, cursive. Screw cursive. It can die outside its use as a calligraphy-like font and signatures. However, once my keyboard speed picked up, I found the ability to put my thoughts on paper almost as fast as I can think them to be useful. That, combined with an over-active imagination, and writing is really the only way to bring an almost cinematographic way I see things in my head work. We’re talking not just stories, but mental camera angles, music scores applied to the right moments, that kind of thing. Writing is probably the closest I’ll get to bringing that to life short of being a movie director. And being a movie director is not a job I desire to have.

What advice do you have for the authors out there?

Write in a manner that works for you, but remember your audience. Juggling the stuff you have in your head against the audience you’re ultimately trying to entertain is no mean feat. You have to find that balance between controlling what you write, and following advice. No story will ever be perfect, and nobody has all the life experience to get every aspect of every situation absolutely perfect in every way. Don’t be afraid to tell your audience right to their face: “I have no idea how this works, but I’m writing it anyway.” But always give the critics a polite ear… Provided they’re being polite. If they aren’t being polite, kindly slaughter them with a rabid squirrel. And of course, apologize to the squirrel for the inconvenience.

This story was filled to the brim with verisimilitudinous space flight jargon. What's your experience with aeronautics and/or space travel?

I’ve always been a bit of a sci-fi and space geek from the time I could watch the classics like Star Wars and Star Trek. I even have the tech manual. But since say, 2006 or so, I started creeping into flight sim materials and aerospace. Both of those took off around 2010 when I started trying to fly in FSX on real settings. I picked up orbiter, learned to fly spaceflight in that, and added Kerbal Space Program as I went. Mods got added to Kerbal, and I studied the technical aspects of how everything worked until I’m at a point where I could almost instruct others. Not just the flying aspects, but the principles behind the building aspects. There’s a certain sophistication with elegance that goes into aerospace. Simplicity stacked on simplicity until it looks complex.

What went into planning the future that leads to this mission?

Literally nothing. I was sitting in a semiconductor fab, a job that was 12 hours a day of waiting for something to act up and imagining the ships from Orbiter interacting with ponies. I started scraping a sequence of logs together on the computer while I was sitting there just to keep from going nuts. The future was just ‘whatever was convenient’.

Can you tell us anything more about the political situation that led to Randy being sent out alone?

It all amounts to nobody being able to agree on representation for a historic long range flight of an FTL vessel, and bickering like children. Except instead of scrapping the project or begrudgingly slapping a B-team together, it results in an admittedly unrealistic case of ‘just send this guy, everything else is automated anyway’. I didn’t think much beyond that except to provide some kind of narrativium to kickstart it.

What was your approach to balancing comedy with the more serious tone?

I’ve grown up with what amounts of a continuous feed of bad, worse, and ugly news from about the world. I see horror movies, tragedies, and things with downer endings and wonder why anyone would want to torture themselves by consuming media that just makes them upset when the world already provides in spades. So I focus on a light mood, even when serious. In doing so, I keep things rolling along in a more or less steady mellow tone, but with comedy spaced in like CAPITAL LETTERS space in paragraphs. I also try to utilize more situational comedy and less crude ‘potty humor’. Intelligent jokes and wry humor beat a cheap fart joke any day.

What lies in Randy's future in Equestria?

Imagine a buddy cop show where Randy and Rainbow Dash fight crime, while Chrysalis is their ever-angry police chief and Twilight is their go-to tech expert.

...Okay. I lie. Honestly, I’ve never considered anything beyond the closing. Status Quo is king, and Randy at this point is waiting for Earth to send full support. I imagine that more or less the fun, light-hearted adventure of one man lands on a planet of sapient horses is going to turn into a political drama rife with red tape and other bureaucratic nonsense. I painted the positive side of humanity because I wanted readers to feel good after going through this. Too many writers are so busy painting humanity like a cancerous scourge waiting to infect happy watercolor pony world that I really just don’t feel like exploring the complexity of the future situation and I wouldn’t want to put a sophisticated plot together anyway. That, and I feel that with MLP's later seasons, the tone on the friendship concept feels almost ‘cult’ like. (*Knock on the door*  Hello sir!  Have you discovered FRIENDSHIP today?  It’s amazing and will solve ALL your problems-” *SLAMS DOOR*  …)

Dangit, Pinkie...

The last thing I want to do is write political drama going head to head with over the top ideological sappiness. That sounds like a good way to make a supercell thunderstorm. Only with concepts instead of wind, heat, and moisture.

Do we even WANT to know what a tornado made out of filibuster would do to a city?  I sure don’t. And we have Pinkie Pie. She would make it happen just to spite physics.

Is there anything else you'd like to add?

Given some engine thrust mechanics I’ve been dealing with recently, I think the Raven might actually be a hybrid nuclear-thermal propulsion system augmented with scramjets. It’s the only propulsion system that produces enough thrust, with a low-enough fuel consumption, to pull off what that Raven does in terms of hovering. This will probably go over the heads of most people reading this, but imagine it as nuclear steampunk. Because the propellant best used here is actually water, for several reasons I won’t go into.

Have fun with that.

- Admiral Tigerclaw
Writer, geek, techie, musician, aerospace enthusiast…  In no particular order.
“It takes skill to win, power to destroy, and wisdom to know when.”

You can read Arrow 18 Mission Logs: Lone Ranger at FIMFiction.net. Read more interviews right here at the Royal Canterlot Library, or suggest stories for us to feature at our Fimfiction group.

Comments ( 35 )

I like this.
a great touch for a super story.

Liked that story.

I greatly enjoyed the story. I hope one day to see continued the journal from Twilight Sparkle's perspective.

PresentPerfect
Author Interviewer

4863357
You're not the only one. c.c

OH sure, big important man doing interviews when "Sparkles Notes" quietly starves to death over on the sidelines.

Going to have to try this out. 2012 HiE stories are always super interesting.

Oh man, what a classic. Old school horsewords at their best.

Loved this story, it indeed was a classic that I tend to reread every now and then when the mood strikes. The space suit thing always bothered me though, it would seem odd that they’d still be using the bulky current standard instead a more efficient one by now. But that was all that bugged and it was incredibly minor compared to the rest of this great story.

Good write up, good interview, and perhaps the best overall HiE fic on this site.

I’ve grown up with what amounts of a continuous feed of bad, worse, and ugly news from about the world. I see horror movies, tragedies, and things with downer endings and wonder why anyone would want to torture themselves by consuming media that just makes them upset when the world already provides in spades. So I focus on a light mood, even when serious.

Amen to that. It's basically the same thing I tell people. :moustache:

Hey, I was wondering when this gem would pop up here!

Indeed a classic. Love it to death.

Love this one! If there was to be a real HIE story in the works, this should be the basis for the script.

Wish the radio play wasn’t defunct.

Been on my Favorites shelf for years! :twilightsmile:

Ey, fix the image links!

This story actually looks like a HiE I’d read. Added to the list!

That and, for the absolute longest time (and by that I mean “until today”), I thought this user’s username was a Warrior Cats reference. (I mean, Tigerclaw was a Warriors deputy, and deputy could be converted in human terms as admiral...but that was just my line of thinking.) Long story short, that fact of the interview shook me for five minutes straight.

Definitely a classic. It's been sitting on my read later ever since the bookshelf revamp ages ago, and I desperately need to get around to reading it again.

Also made my handwriting atrocious, and the speed was garbage. Also, cursive. Screw cursive.

I've been using cursive almost exclusively ever since I learned, primarily because I can't stand how ugly my printing looks to me.

That, combined with an over-active imagination, and writing is really the only way to bring an almost cinematographic way I see things in my head work. We’re talking not just stories, but mental camera angles, music scores applied to the right moments, that kind of thing. Writing is probably the closest I’ll get to bringing that to life short of being a movie director. And being a movie director is not a job I desire to have.

I know that feel.

4863360
I second that emotion.

I've been using cursive almost exclusively ever since I learned, primarily because I can't stand how ugly my printing looks to me.

I've a pretty good idea how you feel; my writing's not ugly, per se, but it's not terrific either (though my Mom tells me otherwise). In addition I have a weird tendency to mix printing and cursive whenever I write. I pretty much have to force myself to stick with one or the other.

I’m glad this was my first HiE story I’ve read and I believe this is a classic that everyone should read! :yay:

I hope too see the audio part of the series get completed so that I can listen to the amazing story again :rainbowderp:

For those of you curious about the audio part. The ball is actually in my court as I requested to do the sound work on the flight recorder log.

Unfortunately, my sound card died. And I relied a LOT on my SoundBlaster's special 'What U Hear' record-back function to grab things. (It essentially takes the output stream and uses it as an input stream, without having to run lines.)

For those complaining about Sparkle's Notes... Get your long-wait gear out. I'm low prioritizing that at the moment.

And for that, one comment about being the big bad guy having an interview... Present Perfect literally PMed me out of the blue two weeks ago with the statement that A18 was going in the RCA, and gave me a link to a google doc for it. It took me, maybe thirty minutes tops before going to bed to answer the questions.

4864417
What does RCA mean?

4864518

I typed fast. It's Royal Canterlot Archive, which is really the Royal Canterlot Library.

PresentPerfect
Author Interviewer

4864541
Nope, we make records now, the secret is out. :B

A well deserved addition.

I like this. Arrow 18 was one of my first stories to read on this site, and the first to deal with a spaceman to meet ponies in an actually realistic way it could happen. I loved how real these scenarios played out. Different languages, reasonable actions on both sides, NOT a huge "human-is-superior" stereotype, it is almost needless to say Arrow 18 is one of my favorites and I enjoyed every word of it.

4863357
Yes, please for that! Also more Change is Good if it's not too much trouble.

Is there a better HiE? I don't think so.

Arn

Really enjoy this story.If I have to wait for more I will.

Absolutely loved this story! So glad to see it in the RCL. :)

Like many others, I also loved this story. I think it was one of the first stories that I added to my Favorites. From 'Sparkle's Notes', two of the scenes that I remember most vividly are (1) when Twilight startles Randy and she notes various things about his hands, and (2) when Twilight is showing Celestia the images (courtesy of Randy) of magical creatures in human mythology and Celestia remarks on how unicorns were some of the only creatures represented as beautiful instead of fearsome.

I truly hope that you find the time and drive to continue Sparkle's Notes, nay, finish it!

I'm too tired right this moment to be subtle; HiE is a garbage genre. If it was thrown into a dumpster fire, practically nothing of value would be lost.

This fic, however, is where the 'practically' comes in. It's the only HiE on my favorites list, and is legit on my fictitious top ten list. I particularly recall the scene where Randy takes Twilight and Rainbow Dash up to the ship in orbit and it is treated with all the epic dignity of a culture making its way into space for the first time as our own first steps were. I remember tearing up at that point.

This story is one of the best and deserves every single accolade it's every gotten. It's not perfect, but that only adds to its charm. It is an amazing story crafted by one person in his spare time, as fanfiction and a love letter to both real world science and hard sci-fi.

Loved that story! =D
Your inner mind's eye seems a lot like mine, same with past history with writing (though I specialize in poetry.) I just haven't gotten my typing speed much past the chicken-pecking stage, so my mind still runs too fast for my hands to keep up.

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