top | item 8634478

Minesweeper Fanfiction

67 points| frozenport | 11 years ago |fanfiction.net | reply

32 comments

order
[+] mercer|11 years ago|reply
I love these kinds of things, and I consider this one of the best things about the internet.

I've spent entire days exploring weird subreddits, their social rules, and the way some of them interact with each other. And from the 'pc master race' phenomenon to the enmity between reddit, 4chan, imgur and 9gag, from a forum filled with nothing but elaborate (and often well-researched and well-written) alternate histories to the troubling 'men's rights' movement, from the ecosystem of Minecraft to the parallels between cults and the more fanatical bitcoin 'groups': I can observe all of these things effortlessly without leaving my house.

How amazing (and sometimes terrifying) is that?

[+] samspot|11 years ago|reply
I have to ask what is troubling about the men's rights movement? Sure there are a lot of people hanging around there that don't get it, but the primary issues are important. It is particularly troubling to me that male rape victims are still routinely laughed out of police stations. Issues like these deserve attention, and there are very few people working on them.
[+] pavel_lishin|11 years ago|reply
There's probably a subreddit full of people just like you that you just haven't stumbled across yet.

Or maybe you have.

[+] lmm|11 years ago|reply
Most subcultures look weird from the outside - HN is probably weirder than fanfiction.net in many respects. It's unhealthy and self-defeating to mock them for that.
[+] Houshalter|11 years ago|reply
I don't see anyone mocking them. It's just funny to me that it exists. There are far more ridiculous short story topics posted in /r/WritingPrompts every day, and that's a default subreddit.
[+] ISL|11 years ago|reply
Interesting; I don't see it as mocking to post the existence of a thing to HN. The existence of a unique, curious, and very human part of the web surely fits the description of "anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity".

Thanks, frozenport. I'd never have guessed that such a thing could be a thing.

[+] StavrosK|11 years ago|reply
For people who were lost like me, these aren't comments on one story. Each is one complete story, and these are the titles. Click on one to read the actual story.

The hell?

[+] spatten|11 years ago|reply
We (mostly my cofounder at Leanpub, Peter, but I've done it once or twice) do the same thing when talking about "the rise of serial fiction via fanfiction" to a publishing audience.

We show them the "books" page of fanfiction.net[1] and then note that the numbers there are the number of stories written in each book's universe, not the number of readers or views or anything like that. Go look if you haven't seen it, it's amazing.

[1]: https://www.fanfiction.net/book/

[+] dirkk0|11 years ago|reply
Thanks. I also didn't know how this works.
[+] andrey-p|11 years ago|reply
Hey, I don't understand what the problem is. The premise is ambiguous enough to invite creativity. You'd probably stumble upon a lot more innovation and playfulness here than in, say, the Sherlock Holmes fanfic section, where people would have to deal with character and setting established over decades.

(Note: I'm really just speculating here. I haven't read any of the fanfic here, and the only Sherlock Holmes fanfic I've read is Neil Gaiman's. I could be wildly wrong.)

[+] britta|11 years ago|reply
Fanfiction writers are creative with all types of media - it's part of the culture to go wild with experimental ideas and have fun with them, laughing together about it. Well-established characters mean that you have more common elements between stories, but humans find infinite stories to tell (and when you get bored of telling normal stories, you make up "alternate universe" stories for your favorite characters). The various kinds of Sherlock Holmes fanfiction are usually more serious than these Minesweeper stories, but that's more about them being based on more serious/complex material. (I have read a lot of fanfiction.)
[+] tripzilch|11 years ago|reply
> Hey, I don't understand what the problem is.

I don't assume there is a problem implied, it's just a cool example of the endless variety of weird stuff on the Internet. And the rampant post-modernism of the 21st century, I guess :)

[+] pcthrowaway|11 years ago|reply
This must be like the Aristocrats for aspiring fanfic writers.
[+] cmdkeen|11 years ago|reply
You don't need fiction for bizarre minesweeping stories.

During the Falklands War the British needed to confirm whether the entrance to Falkland Sound had been mined before the landings could begin. Not having any minesweepers with the task group HMS Alacrity, a Type 21 frigate, was detailed off to find out.

This involved sailing up and down to see if they hit anything, with all non-essential personnel staying above the water-line. Thankfully they didn't find any mines.

[+] jimmcslim|11 years ago|reply
I read it as Minecraft fanfic at first and I thought, 'What the hell?' but hey fair enough. Then I realised it was MineSWEEPER fanfic and I thought, 'WHAT THE HELL??!?'
[+] Rolpa|11 years ago|reply
There's Pong fan fiction too, you know.
[+] personjerry|11 years ago|reply
There's no way that there are enough people this into Minesweeper to fill 87 pages with these. No way.
[+] ChrisClark|11 years ago|reply
It's a way to practice writing. Take a quick topic and see what you can make out of it.

Just like reddit's /r/WritingPrompts.

[+] sp332|11 years ago|reply
First, you don't have to be "into" Minesweeper to write fanfic (although maybe it helps). Second, since it was one of the games installed on every Windows computer for a few decades, it has an insane number of devoted players.
[+] bglusman|11 years ago|reply
It's not 87 pages, it's 4 pages and 87 stories. I think it may be kind of a meta-fanfic-joke? Maybe? I Hope?
[+] crumpled|11 years ago|reply
These authors seem fully aware of the absurdity. Minesweeper is more of an exercise than an obsession.
[+] TrinnyLopez|11 years ago|reply
Reminds me of Creative Writing class in high school.