Herald Competition Approval Guidelines: Difference between revisions

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{{Herald}}
{{Herald}}


This page will describe the details of the requirements and expected guidelines for Herald Approved Competitions. Approved Competitions typically cover two areas: Cluster of Graphite awarded and Non-Cluster of Graphite awarded. What are these and how does one know how to submit a competition for each? This will be explained below and examples of how one may lay out their competitions will be provided.
This page details the process, requirements and guidelines for holding Herald-approved competitions. Examples and templates are offered to guide you through the process. This article mainly covers Graphics competitions that reward [[Cluster of Graphite|Clusters of Graphite]], but also covers those that do not.  


'''''Special Note: All of the following competitions must go through the Herald and MAA staff for approval before it will be available.'''''
''These competitions must be approved by both the offices of the Herald and MAA before they are made available to the membership.''


'''''Important Note:''' If a competition is being submitted without the intention of seeking Clusters of Graphite, a competition archetype for that will remain available through regular channels.''
==Herald Office Competition Approval Guidelines==


==Herald Office Competition Approval Guidelines==
===Creating A Graphics Competition==
 
[[File:Graphics_Competition_1.png|left|220px]]
 
'''Competitions that award Clusters of Graphite''' are typically those which require ''original artwork'' as the main focus of the prompt. Original artwork includes graphics such as drawn/painted art, logos, maps, etc. and multimedia entries such as videos, music, and animations. So long as the prompt primarily involves ''original'' artwork, the competition falls under Graphics/Multimedia and should thus be created as a Graphics Competition, ''not'' Regular Competition.
 
Also note that in order to be eligible for Clusters of Graphite, the competition should be connected to the Star Wars universe, the Dark Jedi Brotherhood or generic interests adjacent to club and clan culture, such as inktober-style events. If you are uncertain whether or not your prompt falls within an acceptable margin, please consult with the Herald staff. The Herald’s office reserves the right to make exceptions to this rule under certain conditions as well as the right to remand or otherwise decline prompts that stray too far from club interests.


===Cluster of Graphite Awarded==
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="1" | Example
|-
! The prompt “Draw your DB character in the Witcher universe” would be acceptable as it reimagines your existing DB character in an alternate universe. Meanwhile, the prompt “Draw the witcher Geralt of Rivia dancing a jig” would be remanded as it strays into an entirely different franchise with no tangible link to our club interests.
|}
</center>


[[File:Graphics_Competition_1.png|left|200px]]
The image to the left shows the competition type which should be selected in order for your competition to be eligible for Clusters of Graphite. Graphics/Multimedia will be the only option in the Competition Type section. No other competition type offers Clusters of Graphite.  


Cluster of Graphite Awarded competitions are typically those which require '''''original artwork''''' as the main focus of the prompt. So long as the prompt '''''primarily''''' involves '''''original''''' artwork, the competition may be Graphics or Multimedia under the Graphic Competition main selection. '''''Not Regular Competitions'''''. Also note that the competition must be connected to the Star Wars universe or the Dark Jedi Brotherhood to be considered for Cluster of Graphite.
Once “Create Graphics Competition” is selected, you will be brought to a blank form that you must fill and then submit for approval. Each step is explained below.
The image to the left is where one will start in order to make a competition which awards '''''Cluster of Graphite'''''. Graphics and Multimedia will be listed under the same option upon arrival to the competition creation page. Note that this box to the left also details that this provides Cluster of Graphite so if one were to question if they had selected the right option, note if you clicked the one which awards the clusters.  


Once one were to click “Create Graphics Competition”, they will be brought to a page which has the contents of the image below upon the top of the page. Let us break down each step of this section below.
====Basic Information====


[[File:GraphicComp_Part1.png|600px|right]]
[[File:GraphicComp_Part1.png|600px|right]]


'''Title''': This is where you input the title of your competition. Herald-run competitions will have “HRLD” in the title which means that specific competition is sanctioned by the Herald and being endorsed under the office. In special cases, one may ask for endorsement from the Herald’s office by emailing the [https://www.darkjedibrotherhood.com/units/council Herald staff mailing list]. The office reserves the right to deny a request.


'''''Title''''': Pretty self explanatory. The difference one may see is that a Herald-run competition will have “HRLD” in the title which means this is sanctioned by the Herald and being endorsed under the office. One may always ask if they can run a competition with “HRLD” in the title, but understand that the office retains the right to deny a request.
'''Start and End Date''': The Start Date should be planned in advance, ideally at least 48 hours before the competition is projected to start. Otherwise, delays may occur should the competition be remanded at any level and require alterations. For the End Date, the recommended run-time for DJB-wide events is 14 to 21 days. During a Club-wide Vendetta such as a Great Jedi War or a Rite of Supremacy, member-run competitions may be remanded and/or rejected due to overlap.  


'''''Start and End Date''''': The Start Date should ideally be planned in advance and not within 24-hours before the competition is projected to start. If the competition has a reason to remand and it is within 24-hours of the projected State Date, this may cause a delay in members being able to participate in the competition. For the End Date, the suggested run-time for DJB-wide events is 14-21 days. Competitions which run during a Club-wide Vendetta (i.e. Great Jedi War or Rites of Supremacy) may be remanded and/or rejected due to overlap.  
'''Co-organizers''': Input the pin of any Co-organizers here. Co-organizers are expected and required to ''assist'' in running and grading the competition.


'''''Co-organizers''''': This is something you would sort out with your clan or house on who will be listed. Understand that the expectation is Co-organizers will be '''''assisting''''' in the grading or running of the competition.
'''Target Unit''': Select the targeted unit. This establishes who is able to participate and place in the competition as well as the tier of crescents you are able to award under Competition Award Level.


'''''Target Unit and Competition Award Level''''': Generally see the expectations for Competition Award Level established by the MAA Office. This is referenced under [[Crescents]] but have also referenced a rough explanation below. If you have any questions, always ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, and/or MAA Staff.  
'''Competition Type''': Graphics/Multimedia are combined and there is only one option.  


{| class="fancy"
'''Competition Award Level''': Select the highest tier of crescents you are allowed to award based on the Target Unit. This is referenced under [[Crescents]] and established by the office of the MAA. Below we offer the baseline for reference. If you have any questions, feel free to ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, and/or MAA Staff.
! Tier !! | Target Unit !!
 
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="2" | Award Levels
|-
! class="sub-head" | Tier
! class="sub-head" | Target Unit  
|-
|-
! Tier 1 Crescents
! Tier 1 Crescents
Line 48: Line 65:
|Battle Team Competitions
|Battle Team Competitions
|}
|}
</center>
'''Parent Competition''' : Select Container of Bracket competition if applicable. Used to tie together sub-competitions or events of a larger competition or vendetta (possibly awarding MVPs). Note the parent competition must be an approved Container or Brackets Competition in order to appear in this list.


'''''Competition Type''''': Graphics and Multimedia are combined and there is only one option.
====The Prompt====


[[File:GraphicComp_Part2.png|600px|left]]
[[File:GraphicComp_Part2.png|600px|left]]


After this is filled in, the next section is the actual Competition Details. Let us move on and discuss these details.  
'''''Public Competition Details''''': This section should have the following details: The Prompt should include instructions, the Grading Criteria, and general rules. This is the meat of the competition. See the Required Elements section to learn how to create these prompts and see what information needs to be included.


'''''Public Competition Details''''': This section should have the following details: The Prompt, The Grading Criteria, and The Instructions. All of these will be discussed further, but currently we are discussing the sections as an explanation.
'''''Subscriber Competition Details''''': This section is similar to Public Competition Details, except that it is for those details that you wish to remain hidden ''until'' a member subscribes to the competition. This is particularly useful for time-sensitive competitions.  


'''''Subscriber Competition Details''''': This section is for details that will not appear '''until''' the member subscribes to the competition. Any details that are to be '''hidden''' until that time should be placed here.  
'''''Competition Settings''''': Self explanatory. Ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, or the MAA Staff if you have questions concerning these settings. We recommend “Hide competition details until the competition starts”.


'''''Competition Settings''''': All of these should be self explanatory. Be sure to ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, or the MAA Staff if you have questions on what settings you should pick for your specific competition. 




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The next and final part is the Graphics Difficulty Class selection.
====Difficulty Settings====


[[File:GraphicComp_Part3.png|650px|right]]
[[File:GraphicComp_Part3.png|650px|right]]


'''''Difficulty Class''''' is unique to Graphics competitions, specifically those which award Cluster of Graphite. They are created as a way to incentivize complex prompts but also give those members of lower skill level the ability to compete for placements without being overshadowed by their peers. There are three difficulties described below: Beginner, Intermediate and Advanced. All of these modify the amount of points granted to each placement which go towards ranking up in the [[Shroud Syndicate|graphics society]]. The Herald has the final say on approving prompts and placing them within designated difficulty classes.  
'''Difficulty settings''' are unique to Graphics competitions, specifically those that award Clusters of Graphite. They exist as a way to communicate the level of effort and time investment expected from participants. Difficulty also dictates the number of Clusters rewarded and the modifier for points granted towards Society ranks for participation. They also allow members of lower skill levels to participate and earn Clusters and points without being overshadowed by their peers. There are three difficulties: Easy, Regular, and Advanced. The Herald staff reserves the right to request that the organizer adjusts the difficulty based on the competition prompts.
 
''Important note: While Difficulty sets expectations for skill level, no member will be penalized or obstructed from participating in a Graphics competition regardless of their perceived skill level. A beginner has every right to participate in an Advanced difficulty competition so long as their submission shows a level of effort on par with expectations established below.''
 
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="3" | Difficulty Settings
|-
! class="sub-head" | Difficulty
! class="sub-head" | Clusters
! class="sub-head" | Points Multiplier
|-
! Beginner
|4
|1
|-
! Intermediate
|6
|1.25
|-
! Advanced
|8
|1.5
|}
</center>
 
===== Easy difficulty =====
Competitions set to Easy difficulty generally require low effort and low time investment. They should have simple prompts and inclusive rules with the expectation that a new artist can achieve reasonable results. These prompts can allow members to draw with stick figures and rudimentary sketches, though a minimum amount of effort should still be visible. Competitions that provide premade assets such as 3D models, doll makers, or a pre-existing line art for coloring all fall under Easy difficulty. If you are looking to make your competition simple, fun, and accessible, select this difficulty. Easy difficulty is the baseline for competitions, rewarding 4 Clusters and a multiplier of 1 for points granted towards Society ranks.
 
'''Easy competition keywords:''' stick figures, pre-made assets, supplied software, coloring books, banners, pixel art, abstract art, accessible, beginner
 
'''Minimum effort expected:''' stick figures allowed, basic color variety for coloring books, no singular shapes or dots, must be on topic and respect prompt rules
 
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="1" | Examples of Easy Difficulty Competitions
|-
!
* Draw stick figures engaged in combat
* Draw an XKDB comic strip (Stick figure)
* Color the supplied image (Coloring book)
* Draw a robe using the supplied pose
* Draw your character as Pixel Art
* Paint a new skin on the supplied blaster
* Design a website banner
* Design a floorplan using [https://www.smartdraw.com/floor-plan/building-plan-software.htm?id=362442&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjwkdO0BhDxARIsANkNcrcLUYennpkHSCGlilBoS9P5ZabymtSj2SbUlCbTdZs4s-PoUAN4WdIaAqYPEALw_wcB Smart Draw] software
|}
</center>
 
===== Regular difficulty =====
Competitions set to Regular difficulty generally require moderate effort and a reasonable time investment. Participants will benefit from a rudimentary understanding of anatomy, proportions, perspective, and color theory. These prompts may require more detail and creativity. If you wish your competition to offer a reasonable challenge and more leeway for creativity, select Regular difficulty. Intermediate difficulty rewards 6 Clusters of Graphite and a multiplier of 1.25 for points granted towards Society ranks.
 
'''Regular competition keywords:''' detail, rudimentary skill, creativity, characters, creatures, logos, items, maps, scenery, vehicles, architecture, anatomy
 
'''Minimum effort expected:''' more detail, no stick figures, no singular shapes or dots, no [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voice_of_Fire Voice of Fire]]-type entries, must be on topic and respect prompt rules
 
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="1" | Examples of Regular Difficulty Competitions
|-
!
* Draw your character having a drink
* Draw a rampaging Rancor
* Design a new blaster
* Design a new clan logo
* Draw a map of a battlefield
* Draw a floorplan of your clan’s new stronghold
|}
</center>
 
===== Advanced difficulty =====
Advanced difficulty competition should be challenging even for a seasoned artist, requiring a high level of effort and time investment. This includes more complex prompts such as drawing a fully-realized piece including color, foreground, and background elements, or creating a multi-panel comic strip. It may require a high level of creativity such as inventing/designing entirely new creatures or spaceships. If you wish to give participants a major challenge and yield complex results, select Advanced difficulty. Advanced difficulty rewards 8 Clusters of Graphite and a multiplier of 1.5 for points granted towards Society ranks.


'''''Important note: While these competitions govern competition prompts, no member will be penalized or in any way obstructed from participating in any given competition, no matter their perceived skill level.'''''
'''Advanced competition keywords:''' multi-panel comics, advanced composition, complex scenes, battle scenes, multiple characters, foreground and background elements, high creativity, lighting, shading
 
'''Minimum effort expected:''' Clear detail, no stick figures, no singular shapes or dots, no [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voice_of_Fire Voice of Fire]]-type entries, must be on topic and respect prompt rules
 
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="1" | Examples of Advanced Competitions
|-
!
* Draw a four-panel comic about a character meeting another character
* Draw a rampaging Rancor crashing through a village and ripping apart a speeder
* Draw a battle scene in space with a Star Destroyer crashing in the background
* Draw your character engaged in a duel with their archnemesis
|}
</center>


Breakdown of the Classes:
====Double Clusters====


* '''''Beginner difficulty:''''' Beginner difficulty competitions are meant to have very simple competition prompts which do not require an overabundance of skill to compete in and win. This would be prompts that ask members to draw with stick figures, very simple sketches, or any competition which provides premade assets such as 3D models, doll makers, or a stencil to color. If you are looking to make your competition very simple and fun, select Beginner difficulty. Beginner difficulty multiples points granted towards Society ranks at a rate of 0.75.
[[File:GraphicComp_DoubleClusters.png|650px|right]]


* '''''Intermediate difficulty:''''' Intermediate difficulty competitions are meant to be the majority of graphics competitions run in the Club. These prompts include, but are not limited to, more complex sketching of characters, places or events in the DB lore; creating full colored images of any theme; creating complex 3D models, and others. If you are looking to make your competition challenging and you wish to give participants more creativity, select Intermediate difficulty. Intermediate difficulty multiples points granted towards Society ranks at a rate of 1, meaning it gives the flat number of points shown on the points table of the graphics society.
Certain graphics competitions are eligible for double clusters. These are Herald-run competitions, vendettas, and large-scale clan competitions. The latter includes house feuds as well as inter-clan or clan-wide events that are not recognized as official vendettas but incorporate a variety of different competition types (such as writing, gaming, puzzles, trivia, etc.) The Herald’s office reserves the right to make exceptions to this rule under certain conditions.


* '''''Advanced difficulty:''''' Advanced difficulty competition prompts are meant to be very challenging for everyone who participates. It may include complex requirements such as drawing a fully detailed, fully colored landscape; or creating a multi-character, multi-panel comic book. If you are looking to make your competition very hard and time consuming, or wish to give participants a major challenge, select Advanced difficulty. Advanced difficulty multiples points granted towards Society ranks at a rate of 1.25.
This feature is available to the Herald, his staff, Council members and Consuls. The competition organizer must simply check “Award Double Clusters of Graphite” to enable this. The additional clusters will automatically be rewarded to participants once the competition has been judged.


Hopefully all of this breakdown has assisted in better understanding of how to make a Graphic Competition. The next section will detail the Required Elements of the competitions.


===Required Elements===
===Required Elements===


'''''The Prompt''''': For DJB-wide events, prompts must be applicable and of interest to the entire Brotherhood. This means that one may not specify or offer different options for individual clans as this might give members of one clan an advantage over another. The Prompt should be very clear and distinct from The Instructions. The Prompt is usually a very specific or far more specific than vague indication on what one is looking for in the art created by the member. Example would be “I task you to create an original piece of artwork which details an emotionally driven moment your Main or ALT character has experienced during the War”.  
====The Prompt====
The first thing you need to consider when creating a prompt is the Target Unit. The prompt should be applicable and of interest to all participants. For example, DJB-wide events need to be of interest to the entire Brotherhood. It cannot be a clan-specific prompt if you expect members from another clan to participate. It needs to be a single prompt applicable to all and cannot include different options for different units as this might provide members of a specific unit an advantage over another.


'''''The Grading Criteria''''': The Grading Criteria is there to tell the member what you will be grading their artwork on. One should include examples of appropriate Grade Criteria: The [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/13dMTASwp1AOxiGAAEPdpsdPOCy-hkzCi_qq2vxKb9Gw/edit?usp=sharing], Humorous to Grader, Most Creative Medium used (if allowing crafts), etc. These grading criteria must be stated in the public details portion of the competition. Note that the Herald Grading Rubric is not '''''required''''' but grading criteria of some kind '''''is required'''''.  
The Prompt itself should be very clear and distinct from the instructions. This is where you include any fictional setup/flavor and establish in specific terms what you want the participants to accomplish. For example, “I task you to create an original piece of artwork which details a particularly emotional moment in the life of your Main or ALT character”.  


'''''The Instructions''''': The Instructions should be very clear what is expected, what is not expected, what will disqualify someone, and what are they required to include. One making a competition must include a special note in the rules that specifies the requirement of citing sources used in the submission. See the example just below.  
====The Grading Criteria====
The grading criteria is required to formally establish the way by which submissions will be graded. This should include specific, unambiguous wording such as “the most humorous to the grader”, the “most creative”, or “Submissions will be graded by quality, creativity and humor in equal parts.” While it is not required, the [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/13dMTASwp1AOxiGAAEPdpsdPOCy-hkzCi_qq2vxKb9Gw/edit#gid=0 Graphics Competition Grading Rubric] is a powerful, expansive tool for grading. When using the Rubric, one can state that “Submissions will be graded in accordance with the Graphics Competition Grading Rubric” and offer a link to it. The grading criteria must be stated in the ''public'' details section of the competition.


'''''Special note: Any photo-manipulation artwork or multimedia project containing fair-use images '''must''' include links to source images and credit links to original authors to be considered valid. Disqualifications or invalid entries will not be granted clusters.'''''
<center>
{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="fancy fancy-green"
| class="head" colspan="1" | Grading Tool
|-
| class="center" | [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/13dMTASwp1AOxiGAAEPdpsdPOCy-hkzCi_qq2vxKb9Gw/edit#gid=0 Graphics Competition Grading Rubric]
|}
</center>


'''''Documentation and Feedback -''''' When DJB wide events are being judged, the grading rubric must be filled out for each entry. These will be subject to verification by Herald Office staff as needed. They should also be made available to those seeking feedback on their work.
====The Instructions====
The instructions or rules should clearly state the parameters of the competition. What is expected (e.g. file formats, sizes, colors, mediums, etc.), what is not expected (e.g. stick figures in Intermediate difficulty competition, etc), as well as key reasons why a participant may be disqualified (eg. wrong number of panels in a comic strip competition with a set amount of panels.) It should be clearly stated what must be included in a valid submission.  


===Organizer help===
'''Artificial Intelligence''': AI-generated entries are not allowed under any circumstances in Cluster-granting competitions.


'''Fair-Use Clause''': Any artwork or multimedia project made through photo-manipulation (photo-bashing) and/or containing images not owned by the member ''must'' (under fair-use policy) include links to source images and credit the original author (within reasonable applicability) to be considered valid. Competition instructions should include a reminder that members are required to cite the source of their work and offer credits to the creator for external images used in their work.


====Graphics competition template====
'''Documentation''':  When DJB-wide events are being judged, the grading rubric must be filled out for each entry. The Herald’s Office reserves the right to verify these as needed. They should also be made available to those seeking feedback on their work.
 
===Graphics Competition Template===


This is a standardized template the Herald staff has provided to help members in making their own competitions:
This is a standardized template the Herald staff has provided to help members in making their own competitions:


   *Prompt: (Include the Prompt here. Be clear and as detailed as you need to be in order to be sure members understand what you want them to draw)
   *Prompt: (Insert prompt here. Be clear and detailed to ensure that participants understand the task at hand.)
   *Other Important Information: (Include other details which may be important to the member such as links to wikipedia pages of Clan/House related material, etc.)
   *Other Important Information: (Include other details required by the participant such as links to wiki pages, etc.)
   *Formats: .PNG, .JPG, .PDF
   *Acceptable formats: .PNG, .JPG, .PDF
  *AI-generated: AI-generated images are not allowed in competitions
  *Photo-manipulation: Remember to provide a link and credit for any image used in your creation
   *Useful Tools: GIMP, Photoshop, Krita, Paint Tool Sai
   *Useful Tools: GIMP, Photoshop, Krita, Paint Tool Sai
   *Grading Criteria: (Include whatever you will be grading each entry against, i.e. the Herald Graphics Grading Rubric.)
   *Grading Criteria: (Include how you will grade the competition, e.g. the Herald Graphics Grading Rubric.)
    Note: All entries must be original artwork and if any resources are used which are not original must be cited in the submission box.
  Note: All entries must be original artwork and if any resources are used that are not original must be cited in the submission box.
 
===Non-Applicable Graphics Competitions===
 
Certain types of Graphics-based competitions do not grant Clusters of Graphite or [[Shroud Syndicate|society points]]. Such competitions include meme, AI-generated Graphics, and battle plans. There are several reasons for this. They may require little to no effort, or primarily use images made by external sources, such as memes. Graphics may not be the main focus of the competition, or they may incorporate a considerable amount of content that isn’t art-based, as is the case for battle plans. To run such competitions, one must refer to MAA policies and create a Regular Competition instead of a Graphics Competition.  


===Non-Cluster of Graphite Awarded===
If you have any questions concerning these, please contact the Herald Staff, and/or the MAA Staff by email.


So how does one make a Regular Competition which has Graphics/Multimedia but does not award Cluster of Graphite? Well the simple answer is the same way any other competition is made in which it would not be normally submitted for clusters. A few examples in which one may submit a Regular Competition which will not be awarded would be Meme creation or Battleplan competitions.
====AI-Generated Submissions====


Again if one has any questions on the competition creation process, please contact your Summit, the Herald Staff, and/or the MAA Staff.  
AI-generated graphics cannot be submitted to society competitions and cannot, under any circumstance, compete in the same competition as member-drawn art. The Herald’s stance is a practical one. For Brotherhood purposes, AI is considered the equivalent of a commission artist. The user requesting the image is not considered the creator. Like a client requesting a commission, the user sets the parameters and dictates changes, but they do not create the art themselves. Someone—or, in this case, something—creates it for them. A member is not allowed to submit another person’s art as their own. In the same vein, one cannot submit art created by AI. Trying to pass off AI-generated art as your own will lead to disqualification and the event will be forwarded to the Justicar for review and investigation.


==Updates==
*Overhaul of competition difficulty settings by Malfearak Asvraal on 07/14/2024
*Removal of AI-generated graphics from Graphics Society competitions by Malfearak Asvraal on 06/23/2024
*Policy text and competition template updated and QoL features added by Malfearak Asvraal on 02/11/2024




[[Category:Herald Policies]]
[[Category:Herald Policies]]

Latest revision as of 10:34, 17 July 2024

Real World Perspective.
Dark Jedi Brotherhood
This article is part of the series:
Herald Policies
Documentation
Avatars
Lightsabers
Robes
Weapons
Warbanners
Unit and leader graphics requests
Policies
Herald Requisition Limit Policy
Herald Competition Approval Guidelines
Herald Vendetta Dossier Skin Guidelines
Current Staff
HRLD Malfearak Asvraal

This page details the process, requirements and guidelines for holding Herald-approved competitions. Examples and templates are offered to guide you through the process. This article mainly covers Graphics competitions that reward Clusters of Graphite, but also covers those that do not.

These competitions must be approved by both the offices of the Herald and MAA before they are made available to the membership.

Herald Office Competition Approval Guidelines

Creating A Graphics Competition

Competitions that award Clusters of Graphite are typically those which require original artwork as the main focus of the prompt. Original artwork includes graphics such as drawn/painted art, logos, maps, etc. and multimedia entries such as videos, music, and animations. So long as the prompt primarily involves original artwork, the competition falls under Graphics/Multimedia and should thus be created as a Graphics Competition, not Regular Competition.

Also note that in order to be eligible for Clusters of Graphite, the competition should be connected to the Star Wars universe, the Dark Jedi Brotherhood or generic interests adjacent to club and clan culture, such as inktober-style events. If you are uncertain whether or not your prompt falls within an acceptable margin, please consult with the Herald staff. The Herald’s office reserves the right to make exceptions to this rule under certain conditions as well as the right to remand or otherwise decline prompts that stray too far from club interests.

Example
The prompt “Draw your DB character in the Witcher universe” would be acceptable as it reimagines your existing DB character in an alternate universe. Meanwhile, the prompt “Draw the witcher Geralt of Rivia dancing a jig” would be remanded as it strays into an entirely different franchise with no tangible link to our club interests.

The image to the left shows the competition type which should be selected in order for your competition to be eligible for Clusters of Graphite. Graphics/Multimedia will be the only option in the Competition Type section. No other competition type offers Clusters of Graphite.

Once “Create Graphics Competition” is selected, you will be brought to a blank form that you must fill and then submit for approval. Each step is explained below.

Basic Information

Title: This is where you input the title of your competition. Herald-run competitions will have “HRLD” in the title which means that specific competition is sanctioned by the Herald and being endorsed under the office. In special cases, one may ask for endorsement from the Herald’s office by emailing the Herald staff mailing list. The office reserves the right to deny a request.

Start and End Date: The Start Date should be planned in advance, ideally at least 48 hours before the competition is projected to start. Otherwise, delays may occur should the competition be remanded at any level and require alterations. For the End Date, the recommended run-time for DJB-wide events is 14 to 21 days. During a Club-wide Vendetta such as a Great Jedi War or a Rite of Supremacy, member-run competitions may be remanded and/or rejected due to overlap.

Co-organizers: Input the pin of any Co-organizers here. Co-organizers are expected and required to assist in running and grading the competition.

Target Unit: Select the targeted unit. This establishes who is able to participate and place in the competition as well as the tier of crescents you are able to award under Competition Award Level.

Competition Type: Graphics/Multimedia are combined and there is only one option.

Competition Award Level: Select the highest tier of crescents you are allowed to award based on the Target Unit. This is referenced under Crescents and established by the office of the MAA. Below we offer the baseline for reference. If you have any questions, feel free to ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, and/or MAA Staff.

Award Levels
Tier Target Unit
Tier 1 Crescents DC-run DJB-Wide Competitions
Tier 2 Crescents Non-DC DJB-Wide Competitions
Tier 3 Crescents Clan Competitions
Tier 4 Crescents House Competitions
Tier 5 Crescents Battle Team Competitions


Parent Competition : Select Container of Bracket competition if applicable. Used to tie together sub-competitions or events of a larger competition or vendetta (possibly awarding MVPs). Note the parent competition must be an approved Container or Brackets Competition in order to appear in this list.

The Prompt

Public Competition Details: This section should have the following details: The Prompt should include instructions, the Grading Criteria, and general rules. This is the meat of the competition. See the Required Elements section to learn how to create these prompts and see what information needs to be included.

Subscriber Competition Details: This section is similar to Public Competition Details, except that it is for those details that you wish to remain hidden until a member subscribes to the competition. This is particularly useful for time-sensitive competitions.

Competition Settings: Self explanatory. Ask your Summit, the Herald Staff, or the MAA Staff if you have questions concerning these settings. We recommend “Hide competition details until the competition starts”.




Difficulty Settings

Difficulty settings are unique to Graphics competitions, specifically those that award Clusters of Graphite. They exist as a way to communicate the level of effort and time investment expected from participants. Difficulty also dictates the number of Clusters rewarded and the modifier for points granted towards Society ranks for participation. They also allow members of lower skill levels to participate and earn Clusters and points without being overshadowed by their peers. There are three difficulties: Easy, Regular, and Advanced. The Herald staff reserves the right to request that the organizer adjusts the difficulty based on the competition prompts.

Important note: While Difficulty sets expectations for skill level, no member will be penalized or obstructed from participating in a Graphics competition regardless of their perceived skill level. A beginner has every right to participate in an Advanced difficulty competition so long as their submission shows a level of effort on par with expectations established below.

Difficulty Settings
Difficulty Clusters Points Multiplier
Beginner 4 1
Intermediate 6 1.25
Advanced 8 1.5
Easy difficulty

Competitions set to Easy difficulty generally require low effort and low time investment. They should have simple prompts and inclusive rules with the expectation that a new artist can achieve reasonable results. These prompts can allow members to draw with stick figures and rudimentary sketches, though a minimum amount of effort should still be visible. Competitions that provide premade assets such as 3D models, doll makers, or a pre-existing line art for coloring all fall under Easy difficulty. If you are looking to make your competition simple, fun, and accessible, select this difficulty. Easy difficulty is the baseline for competitions, rewarding 4 Clusters and a multiplier of 1 for points granted towards Society ranks.

Easy competition keywords: stick figures, pre-made assets, supplied software, coloring books, banners, pixel art, abstract art, accessible, beginner

Minimum effort expected: stick figures allowed, basic color variety for coloring books, no singular shapes or dots, must be on topic and respect prompt rules

Examples of Easy Difficulty Competitions
  • Draw stick figures engaged in combat
  • Draw an XKDB comic strip (Stick figure)
  • Color the supplied image (Coloring book)
  • Draw a robe using the supplied pose
  • Draw your character as Pixel Art
  • Paint a new skin on the supplied blaster
  • Design a website banner
  • Design a floorplan using Smart Draw software
Regular difficulty

Competitions set to Regular difficulty generally require moderate effort and a reasonable time investment. Participants will benefit from a rudimentary understanding of anatomy, proportions, perspective, and color theory. These prompts may require more detail and creativity. If you wish your competition to offer a reasonable challenge and more leeway for creativity, select Regular difficulty. Intermediate difficulty rewards 6 Clusters of Graphite and a multiplier of 1.25 for points granted towards Society ranks.

Regular competition keywords: detail, rudimentary skill, creativity, characters, creatures, logos, items, maps, scenery, vehicles, architecture, anatomy

Minimum effort expected: more detail, no stick figures, no singular shapes or dots, no [Voice of Fire]-type entries, must be on topic and respect prompt rules

Examples of Regular Difficulty Competitions
  • Draw your character having a drink
  • Draw a rampaging Rancor
  • Design a new blaster
  • Design a new clan logo
  • Draw a map of a battlefield
  • Draw a floorplan of your clan’s new stronghold
Advanced difficulty

Advanced difficulty competition should be challenging even for a seasoned artist, requiring a high level of effort and time investment. This includes more complex prompts such as drawing a fully-realized piece including color, foreground, and background elements, or creating a multi-panel comic strip. It may require a high level of creativity such as inventing/designing entirely new creatures or spaceships. If you wish to give participants a major challenge and yield complex results, select Advanced difficulty. Advanced difficulty rewards 8 Clusters of Graphite and a multiplier of 1.5 for points granted towards Society ranks.

Advanced competition keywords: multi-panel comics, advanced composition, complex scenes, battle scenes, multiple characters, foreground and background elements, high creativity, lighting, shading

Minimum effort expected: Clear detail, no stick figures, no singular shapes or dots, no [Voice of Fire]-type entries, must be on topic and respect prompt rules

Examples of Advanced Competitions
  • Draw a four-panel comic about a character meeting another character
  • Draw a rampaging Rancor crashing through a village and ripping apart a speeder
  • Draw a battle scene in space with a Star Destroyer crashing in the background
  • Draw your character engaged in a duel with their archnemesis

Double Clusters

Certain graphics competitions are eligible for double clusters. These are Herald-run competitions, vendettas, and large-scale clan competitions. The latter includes house feuds as well as inter-clan or clan-wide events that are not recognized as official vendettas but incorporate a variety of different competition types (such as writing, gaming, puzzles, trivia, etc.) The Herald’s office reserves the right to make exceptions to this rule under certain conditions.

This feature is available to the Herald, his staff, Council members and Consuls. The competition organizer must simply check “Award Double Clusters of Graphite” to enable this. The additional clusters will automatically be rewarded to participants once the competition has been judged.


Required Elements

The Prompt

The first thing you need to consider when creating a prompt is the Target Unit. The prompt should be applicable and of interest to all participants. For example, DJB-wide events need to be of interest to the entire Brotherhood. It cannot be a clan-specific prompt if you expect members from another clan to participate. It needs to be a single prompt applicable to all and cannot include different options for different units as this might provide members of a specific unit an advantage over another.

The Prompt itself should be very clear and distinct from the instructions. This is where you include any fictional setup/flavor and establish in specific terms what you want the participants to accomplish. For example, “I task you to create an original piece of artwork which details a particularly emotional moment in the life of your Main or ALT character”.

The Grading Criteria

The grading criteria is required to formally establish the way by which submissions will be graded. This should include specific, unambiguous wording such as “the most humorous to the grader”, the “most creative”, or “Submissions will be graded by quality, creativity and humor in equal parts.” While it is not required, the Graphics Competition Grading Rubric is a powerful, expansive tool for grading. When using the Rubric, one can state that “Submissions will be graded in accordance with the Graphics Competition Grading Rubric” and offer a link to it. The grading criteria must be stated in the public details section of the competition.

Grading Tool
Graphics Competition Grading Rubric

The Instructions

The instructions or rules should clearly state the parameters of the competition. What is expected (e.g. file formats, sizes, colors, mediums, etc.), what is not expected (e.g. stick figures in Intermediate difficulty competition, etc), as well as key reasons why a participant may be disqualified (eg. wrong number of panels in a comic strip competition with a set amount of panels.) It should be clearly stated what must be included in a valid submission.

Artificial Intelligence: AI-generated entries are not allowed under any circumstances in Cluster-granting competitions.

Fair-Use Clause: Any artwork or multimedia project made through photo-manipulation (photo-bashing) and/or containing images not owned by the member must (under fair-use policy) include links to source images and credit the original author (within reasonable applicability) to be considered valid. Competition instructions should include a reminder that members are required to cite the source of their work and offer credits to the creator for external images used in their work.

Documentation: When DJB-wide events are being judged, the grading rubric must be filled out for each entry. The Herald’s Office reserves the right to verify these as needed. They should also be made available to those seeking feedback on their work.

Graphics Competition Template

This is a standardized template the Herald staff has provided to help members in making their own competitions:

  *Prompt: (Insert prompt here. Be clear and detailed to ensure that participants understand the task at hand.)
  *Other Important Information: (Include other details required by the participant such as links to wiki pages, etc.)
  *Acceptable formats: .PNG, .JPG, .PDF
  *AI-generated: AI-generated images are not allowed in competitions
  *Photo-manipulation: Remember to provide a link and credit for any image used in your creation
  *Useful Tools: GIMP, Photoshop, Krita, Paint Tool Sai
  *Grading Criteria: (Include how you will grade the competition, e.g. the Herald Graphics Grading Rubric.)
  Note: All entries must be original artwork and if any resources are used that are not original must be cited in the submission box.

Non-Applicable Graphics Competitions

Certain types of Graphics-based competitions do not grant Clusters of Graphite or society points. Such competitions include meme, AI-generated Graphics, and battle plans. There are several reasons for this. They may require little to no effort, or primarily use images made by external sources, such as memes. Graphics may not be the main focus of the competition, or they may incorporate a considerable amount of content that isn’t art-based, as is the case for battle plans. To run such competitions, one must refer to MAA policies and create a Regular Competition instead of a Graphics Competition.

If you have any questions concerning these, please contact the Herald Staff, and/or the MAA Staff by email.

AI-Generated Submissions

AI-generated graphics cannot be submitted to society competitions and cannot, under any circumstance, compete in the same competition as member-drawn art. The Herald’s stance is a practical one. For Brotherhood purposes, AI is considered the equivalent of a commission artist. The user requesting the image is not considered the creator. Like a client requesting a commission, the user sets the parameters and dictates changes, but they do not create the art themselves. Someone—or, in this case, something—creates it for them. A member is not allowed to submit another person’s art as their own. In the same vein, one cannot submit art created by AI. Trying to pass off AI-generated art as your own will lead to disqualification and the event will be forwarded to the Justicar for review and investigation.

Updates

  • Overhaul of competition difficulty settings by Malfearak Asvraal on 07/14/2024
  • Removal of AI-generated graphics from Graphics Society competitions by Malfearak Asvraal on 06/23/2024
  • Policy text and competition template updated and QoL features added by Malfearak Asvraal on 02/11/2024