Also I have no idea how to make a proper quote box. :P
——Original description––––
Twilight said a certain something in Rainbow Rocks after the Dazzlings were blasted by the Elements of Harmony.
Twilight Sparkle: Without those pendants and the magic you brought here from Equestria, they’re just three harmless teenage girls.
There was a blog posted recently on FiMFiction.net that may be helpful:
It Doesn’t Matter Who Started It: On Author Responses to Criticism
Thanks for showing some grace in your reply. Reaction to negative criticism is hardly a strong point for me. I was referring to similar criticisms in other pieces that I posted up, but again that’s a little unreasonable.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go unwind from my unreasonable anger.
“The same criticism”? There were precisely two comments, both expressing different sentiments, though on the same subject; Sonata’s slightly messed-up head in this picture. If you snap like that after two comments, not even malicious ones, mind, you might be a little too sensitive. Criticism can help us improve, but if that’s too tiring for you, maybe just stick to DeviantArt and disable the comments?
That there? Criticism on your behavior, but please don’t overreact if someone else says the same thing, or something vaguely similar.
For what it’s worth, the rest of the picture is perfectly fine, I think. I can tell what I’m looking at and Aria all curled up with her head on Adagio’s lap is adorable, but Sonata’s head is still a bit funky.
@Background Pony #2E63
I’m just frustrated that people keep on giving the same criticisms over and over again. It’s exhausting.
Why’d you bother posting this here then?
Actually, by putting your work in a public forum where anyone is free to comment, yes, you most certainly did ask for criticism.
If the feedback had been nothing but praise, would you have said “I didn’t ask for compliments”?
@Vree
Guys, did I ask for your criticism? No.
Yes, I messed up. No, it’s too late to fix it.