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Not Getting Emails From Fanfiction .

Why am i not getting my fanfiction.net verification email?

What it might be is your e-mail SPAM filter. Go into your e-mail security settings and make sure that it doesn't block any e-mail addresses.

Also, it might be something as simple as the FanFiction database has lost your e-mail verification. Go into your profile as if you're going to change your e-mail address, but enter the same e-mail address again. it should send you a verification e-mail, and once you click the link, it will refresh the server, hopefully solving your problem.

Did you try changing your e-mail on your account page? It should send you a confirmation e-mail, which has a link you need to click to verify your account change.

And yes, changing your user name will effect it. I changed mine a few months ago, and I had to go in and manually change and update my account information (homepage, password, etc).

Try that.

Not getting email alerts from fanfiction.net?

Yahoo retains messing with issues and whilst they alter one factor it screws up something else. I even have observed additionally that for the previous 4 days whilst i'm on line if somebody sends me an on the spot message it would not come by way of. they could deliver a dozen messages and not something exhibits up, no window opens like it used to. Then rapidly Yahoo Messenger will crash and initiate back, and that's whilst all the messages take place at as quickly as. So it sounds like they have tousled some issues interior the previous week.

Why am I not getting emails about my fanfiction reviews?

Read them maybe you are getting published

Why am I not recieving email from fanfiction.net?

First, log on to your account:
Go to your alerts tab
Have you checked that all your alert settings are set to ENABLED ?
Secondly, have you added [ bot@fanfiction.com ] to your contacts?
you won't receive any e-mails if you haven't b/c the site will think you're rejecting them
Also, check your spam/junk folders, in case the e-mails themselves got sent there instead.

hmmm...about storymarks. are they the current version of story alerts?
If so, at the end of each chapter or story you read, there is a pull down tab to which you could choose to:

Add Story to Favorites
Add Story to Story Alert
Add Author to Favorites
Add Author to Author Alert

...etc.

The site sends you an email, on whether or not someone has updated a story or if an author has created a new story. That's what story alert is.

I hope this helps. If not, you could always e-mail the site itself for help.

I can't receive emails from bot@fanfiction.net?

I recieved an digital mail ffrom somebody at right here asserting threatening and sick issues for no reason precise when I only have been given returned from a wreck that became right into some month long I truthfully have no thought how they even stumbled on me I in no way seen them till now i finished up replying and chasing them off.. my digital mail isn't blocked i'm no longer backing down that's via digital mail what are they going to do? get hardcore with the keyboard and write in a cuss be conscious? threaten a 14 year previous woman? come on that's retarded whether I despatched my adress i could be secure expecially when you consider that its contained in the midsection of nowhere up a extensive hill I confer with my friends at right here to when you consider that I have been given them into it so i'm deffinatly no longer letting stupid hatemail contol what I do next

I'm not getting story alerts from fanfiction.net, what's wrong?

Unfortunately, fanfiction.net is a really big community, which means that they have problems sometimes.

First, check to make sure your story alerts are enabled. This is under the Alert tabs in the User Area. Also on that page is this (copy&pasted from source):
"Receiving Email Alerts
If you are having issues receiving email alerts, please make sure you have added bot@fanfiction.com to your email provider/client white/safe sender list. Below is instructions to add our sender email to some of the most popular webmail services: Gmail guide:

1. Log into your Gmail account via your browser of choice. On the left side column, click "Contacts";
2. Click the "+ Person" symbol on the upper left hand side to add a new contact;
3. Type bot@fanfiction.com" under "EMail" field and then click "Save".

Yahoo Mail guide:

1. Log into your Yahoo mail account via your browser of choice. On the left side column, click "Add" to the right of "Contacts";
2. Type bot@fanfiction.com into the "EMail:" field and then click "Save".

Windows Live/Hotmail guide:

1. Log into your Live Hotmail account via your browser of choice. Click "Options", then select "More Options";
2. Under "Junk e-mail", click "Safe and blocked senders", then select "Safe senders";
3. Type bot@fanfiction.com into the field and click "Add to List". "

If all of those things don't help, you can contact them for more help at:
support@fanfiction.com

What are the rules of fan fiction writing?

I have three steps for you. These steps would be even more effective if you are a Harry Potter fan.Read the legendary fan fiction My Immortal. Here, I’ll give you the link: My Immortal Chapter 1: Intro, a harry potter fanficAfter you have read it, sit back and think about this atrocious piece of writing. It embodies everything you should never have in fan fiction: A Mary Sue, completely overwriting of the original story with no good reason to do so, and awful spelling and punctuation. (However, it is a very entertaining read. I laughed my head off at its sheer awfulness.)Now, the rules: Everything the author of My Immortal did with her fan fiction is a bad idea. Seriously. I think the author found a website titled What Not to Do in Fan Fiction and misread the title.But in all honesty, write whatever you want. Fan fiction is a way to express yourself. The rules are defined by the boundaries of your imagination.

How can I improve my fanfiction writing?

Read. Both regular fiction and fan fiction. Learn what works and doesn’t. Become familiar with the cliches of each and know how to subvert them.Know your audience. Know their tastes. Brandi Kochan’s answer is an excellent encapsulation of how many readers feel although individual fandoms have their own specific likes and dislikes. Although you need not follow every rule in order to write a good fanfic, the truism of “You need to know the rules in order to know when to break them” does apply.Spell check. Get a beta reader until you’re confident you don’t need one in order to produce readable text. It isn’t often that I see good ideas and writing spoiled by lousy grammar and spelling, but it saddens me every time.If you’re going to put in major plot twists, fewer is better. Harry is a vampire is fine. Harry is a vampire and is love with Draco is also fine. Harry is a vampire and is love with Draco and has a veela daughter with your name is not fine. (Actually OCs should be avoided altogether until you’re an experienced writer. Figuring out how to make your plot work with the canon characters helps your creativity.) No more than two major twists to a story is a good rule of thumb. Let all the changes flow naturally from the effects of those twists.Never re-write canon. If you include a plot twist, make sure that the plot twist changes the canon. Even the smallest of changes can produce many unexpected results. If you are directly copying from canon, either your work isn’t original enough or you started telling the story too soon. In either case, you need to start over. (“Yes,” you argue, “but the sorting hat’s song wouldn’t change”. “Then the reader doesn’t need to hear it,” I retort. “But some of the lines are important foreshadowing,” you say. “Then have Harry notice those lines. No one wants to read the whole song again.”)Show, don’t tell means to not do what I’m doing right now. However, good description can make a story. Make sure that your descriptions are necessary and vibrant. Forget, “He said slyly” and go with “His voice sounded like a shyster conniving another buck out of a mark” instead. Don’t overdo it either. It’s a careful balance, another reason a beta reader is a must when you’re still unsure of your chops and can be useful for for some time thereafter.

How do you make it so an OC in fanfiction does not outshine the protagonist from the original content?

These simple rules:The protagonist gets her/his main story. It’s still their destiny, not the OC.If the OC wants the protagonist’s love interest, you must create a believable reason why he/she won’t get with the main character. Did one plot point in the canon cause too much ice between them? Maybe a part of their personalities just conflicted too much over time…The OC, cannot be the chosen one. The protagonist is still the chosen one, they have the superior destiny. If the OC has some special purpose, she or he has to pursue it on their own. They can ask the protagonist for help, but they can’t behave as if they are merely a tool to accomplish their own unique journey.If the story is a simple drama/teeny romance plot, then you can’t just write the Protagonist as a friend or family member without creating a believable back story. Don’t just have us assume that so and so has been their friend or romantic interest for ages without describing those events first.The Protagonist better be in character. Please don’t make them unlikable, especially in a plot where your character wants to romance the Protagonist’s interest, and believes that they must be written as pretentious or whiny and jealous to do so. I’ve seen a lot of these, and they annoy me. The main-main character is usually someone who has fans because they don’t have negative traits to their personality. No one is perfect, but no one is absolutely negative or pissy all the time. You can’t also villian-ize the protagonist in the story just because you want your OC to romance their interest. That’s kind of lame.

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