manyeyedhydra
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2007
- Posts
- 1,014
While I certainly offer my congratulations to the winners, I personally would've liked to know that changes to entries at any point after submission to the contest were acceptable. I had a few little blips in my story that I would've liked to edit and didn't, thinking I had to wait until after judging was complete. That said, I also would like to know how judging was accomplished. No offense to the winners, but "Dark Miracle" is still rating higher than several of the winners, and has all along throughout the contest. I can only surmise that other factors (perhaps total number of votes? number of views?) are taken into consideration.
If Literotica published their judging method in detail, it would put the silly arguments on forum boards like these to rest for good, and a decent amount of the angst involved in the contests could be avoided. We could all simply do what we do best: write. I don't understand what harm it could do to tell the patrons of the site how our own contest winners are actually determined.
But then, I have a disturbing tendency towards fairness in nearly everything...
Well done to the winners - a blessed Samhain and Happy Halloween to all!
- Wicked
Looks like you just missed out on the top 3. Tx's 3rd place story had the same score as yours (4.78) a couple of days back. Comparing the scores after the winners are announced is meaningless as there are, sadly, far too many jealous types that see the winning entry and go "How did this win, it's nowhere near as good as my entry - 1 bomb!"

Others have already said why Literotica can't put up the details on how the winners are determined. It would change a largely meaningless internet vote with an opaque scoring system that still spits out decent quality stories as winners into a completely meaningless internet vote with a transparent scoring system that spits out crap written by who best figured out how to fiddle the system as winners.
It really isn't worth taking these competitions too seriously. They bring extra readers and the good writers get a book voucher from time to time.