01

Write Toward The Scene

Contributions should help the screenplay become sharper, truer, stranger, more specific, or more emotionally honest. Critique the line, the scene, the continuity, or the production problem.

Do not turn creative disagreement into personal attacks on contributors, editors, actors, identities, relationships, or lived experiences.

02

Respect Attribution

Do not claim another contributor's work as your own. Do not submit copied material from other scripts, books, private chats, or communities.

When building on someone else's idea, make the lineage visible in your note whenever possible.

03

Disclose AI Assistance

AI-assisted contributions should be labeled honestly. AI can be useful for alternatives, continuity checks, and draft exploration, but the project values judgment over volume.

Low-effort AI spam, undisclosed impersonation, or fabricated lived experience may be rejected or moderated.

04

Keep The Room Usable

No harassment, hate, threats, spam, sexual exploitation, doxxing, malware, or attempts to manipulate reputation and voting systems.

Editors can hide, reject, limit, or remove content and accounts that make the writers' room less usable.

05

Report With Context

Use reports for abuse, spam, rights concerns, AI disclosure issues, impersonation, or material that creates real risk for the project or community.

A report does not automatically remove content. It creates a review record for editors and admins.

06

Canon Is Editorial

Votes, reactions, and comments influence editorial attention, but they do not decide canon on their own.

The editorial team is responsible for continuity, tone, production feasibility, safety, and the final canonical version of each scene.