RIP NaNoWriMo

The official email went out. They’re done.

Not surprising but still a bit sad to see it go.

The email

We come to you today with a major operational update and important news about the future of the organization.

National Novel Writing Month
To Our NaNoWriMo Community:

We come to you today with sad news. After six years of struggling to sustain itself financially, NaNoWriMo (the nonprofit) will begin the process of shutting down.

Explaining how we got here is both simple and complex. The funding woes that have threatened so many nonprofits in recent years are an unextraordinary trend. Many beloved organizations announced their closure last year. Many more are fighting for their lives. Media coverage of financial crisis within the sector—especially among arts nonprofits—has been widespread.

Yet, there are ways in which NaNoWriMo is extraordinary—and reasons why we had hoped we could buck that trend. The sheer size of our community, its global reach and its longevity, held at impressive levels, even during a tumultuous year. There is no shortage of writers who want to participate in NaNoWriMo. Yet, building a community and being able to sustain it are two different matters. 2024 was a revelatory year.

In order to fully understand how we reached this decision, and why we view it as the only alternative, we encourage you to watch this video about the State of NaNoWriMo. The video also contains some important acknowledgments and information about the logistics of our next steps. Most importantly, the video shares real data and information that the organization has not discussed previously. The plot is thicker than you might think.

Screen shot of the first slide of a Power Point presentation that says “State of NaNoWriMo - An Update to Our Community - March 2025”
We recognize that the closure of NaNoWriMo represents a huge loss to the writing community, and that grief over this outcome will be exacerbated by the challenges of the past sixteen months. This is not the ending that anybody wanted or planned. And—believe us—if we could hit the delete button and rewrite this last chapter, we would. But we do have hope for the epilogue.

What’s next for NaNoWriMo, the indebted nonprofit, is much different from what’s next for actual Wrimos. We hold no belief that people will stop writing 50,000 words in November (and April, and July) or stop seeking support for the journey they’re on. Many alternatives to NaNoWriMo popped up this year, and people did find each other. In so many ways, it’s easier than it was when NaNoWriMo began in 1999 to find your writing tribe online.

Our greatest hope at this moment is that you do two things: support arts nonprofits you love (they really, truly need you) and keep writing words. Your stories matter.

Thank you for all you have done for the organization, and especially for each other, over all these years.

Sincerely,

The NaNoWriMo Team

A Few Additional Notes

We anticipate that some people might want to log on and capture information that is meaningful to them, like their lifetime word count or stats from previous seasons or challenges. We also anticipate that some folks on the Young Writers Program website may not have backed up work that they wrote directly into our system, and may wish to do so at this time. If there is something you feel you need to retrieve, you are welcome to try. However, our site tends to crash a lot when overrun with too much traffic (chronic technology underinvestment is mentioned in the video). We apologize for any inconvenience if the site gets crashy.
If you are a recurring donor, thank you for your ongoing support of the organization (truly). We have cancelled all recurring donations on our end in order to ensure that you will not be charged as we transition into our next phase.
If you want anything from the NaNoWriMo store, please don’t delay. We will shut that down soon as well.
Finally, we have observed that, at times of change, many members of our community are in want of spaces to process these new developments, and that, historically, we have hosted many all-community online spaces. Unfortunately, we have very limited resources to reply individually to comments or to moderate our social spaces at this time. We will do our best but make no guarantees.

The video they linked

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I admit that I am conflicted. As much as I want to celebrate the death of an organization that allowed pedophiles to roam free, NaNoWriMo is something that brought a whole world of writers together.

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Oh, I’m shocked. I used to try and take part in Camp NaNo years ago (last year, I missed them all, though)

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Does anybody feel like sharing sparknotes on the drama? I was never on NaNo and am not up to date :eyes: I also don’t have 30 mins to watch the video rn…which I assume does not cover the controversy? Or maybe it does?

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The short version is the NaNoWriMo forum allowed pedophiles to groom teenagers, failed to cover it up, then allowed AI writing in a failed attempt to be more inclusive.

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Ohhhhhhh…oh…no… :woman_facepalming:

Sounds like a mess. But AI writing is now on all platforms, I think. Inkitt technically requires you to mark it, but I don’t think there are any controls. And I’ve been seeing quite a few “AI-assisted” stories. Who know how many there really are…

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Indeed sad, but NaNo started going downhill for me when they revamped their website and moved it. I preferred the old site, where you could sort your buddy list by how many words written and know who you were ahead of and who you were behind. I did like the stats page on the new site, with the owl and flamingo and stuff. Poor NaNo. Rest in pieces, NaNo dude. ヾ(˘-˘)

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To avoid the hearsay, which I think greatly got out of hand, a lot came to light in 2023. In short, the org lacked the right tools and approach to handle a community this large. Complaints weren’t investigated promptly, moderators were not… moderated. It was a free for all, which left minors vulnerable. And then everyone came forward with their grievances, which the org couldn’t address, which is why they shut down the forums. But it wasn’t over.

In the video, they admit that they should have done background checks, gathered names, etc, but never did. It was all run like a backyard party.

What no one knew though was how much financial trouble the org was in and in the end, that’s why they shut it down.

It’s sad that it couldn’t be saved, but maybe it was inevitable.

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I think the AI thing got blown out of proportion by a lot of people.

It came from communication from nano org (and it was on their site too) where they very poorly said that they would not allow AI discrimination, and you can imagine that people had a lot to say about it.

I think it was because of their partnership with pro writing aid which has AI tools in it. I think they were required to post something like that but yeah, they did not handle that well.

In the video they mentioned a partner org that they almost merged with but who pulled out of the deal once they saw how much debt nano was in. And I wonder if it was pro writing aid. We might never know.

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Damn. That’s a lot. I’m sure it couldn’t have been easy running a community that big, we’re barely treading water here on Wacky…the sad thing, though, is that nobody wants to invest in community anymore. It’s more trouble than it’s worth + AI can write books now, so who care about fostering creativity through community :woman_shrugging:

I never got to spend much time on forums and such, and I can’t say I’m far ahead in the writing game, but if it hadn’t been for tiny little windows of opportunity way back on the WP forums, I think I would have given up writing by now…

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I’m scared for this community here. I’d hate to lose it. We need more people to help support it but also that would come with the bigger issues.
History doesn’t look good.

With nano, I wasn’t invested in the forums. I found them too busy. I could never keep up.
But I love it that the event brought together our local writers. We had some very good times in person, during discord calls, etc. I miss it all.

We still have the discord but so few of us are active, it’s far from what it was.

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We’re gonna try not to sink :sweat_smile: but more people around wouldn’t necessarily mean more support. It’s difficult to fund something that doesn’t really generate anything :woman_shrugging: If anybody’s got a sugar daddy to spare… :rofl::rofl:

We’re holding on for now, though, there’s no immediate cause for concern :grin:

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These look like interesting free alternatives to NaNo. There were a number of paid ones too, but I didn’t bother saving those addresses since I’ve got no geetus at the moment. If anyone’s interested, there’s a list of sites at the unofficial NaNoWriMo subreddit. ¯\_(ﭢ)_/¯

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Ooooh, here’s one more…if you can write a whole novel in three days! ☜(ˆ▿ˆc)

https://www.3daynovel.com/

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To be honest, I think a lot of the issues people had with it, aside from ethical issues with AI, was how their post was phrased. Disabled people (me included) have been trudging through NaNo for decades, some of us (talking about me, and the many others part of being an overachiever) even hitting 500k, 600k, even a mil words - all while disabled. Plenty of disabled folks are wholly against generative AI, in all forms, and their post was insulting.

I’m really sad to see NaNo go, but the second I learned Kilby was the only in one charge, was the second I realised this was the only possible outcome.

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Wow! So F*cked up. eh?

I never did a NaNo, nor even thought abut it, but I know a few of you here did entry’s for it over the few years I’ve been here… And just wow! The corruption of Minors left vulnerable, the added debt, and AI not being moderated enough to boot! Damn!

How I miss the old days of WriteOn and Authonomy! At least they felt safe for all (in all their abilities to do so)…

SD

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Oh yeah. Their AI wording was strange and insulting. They have a history of making poor decisions and bad communication.

This whole video is yet another proof. Why not exit gracefully, admit that mistakes were made and they couldn’t recover from them.
Instead, they had to add a guilt trip that wrimos didn’t donate enough.

Wtf? It’s not the users’ responsibility to fund the nonprofit. Not our fault that they can’t figure out their business model or secure sponsorship.

Oh, well. I don’t think there was any other way out of this mess. Time to move on.

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Honestly, I hope that we could use wackys this way. We just need to come to an agreement of a timing.

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Oh, thank you for these suggestions! I’ll see if some of them can help me get rid of my procrastination habits—well, when ONC is over

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I totally agree! And we wouldn’t even need to do it in November, since quite frankly November was always a bad month for me with the holidays and everything. This is April, so we could all do Camp NaNo right now, right here! I definitely agree with all the posters on YouTube who said the spirit of NaNo will never die; it was just the commercial aspect of it that died. ( ˆ◡ˆ)۶ ٩(˘◡˘ )

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