Subject: Well, the logic doesn't follow, for one thing.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-01 04:26:00 UTC

Did the reviewer want you to volunteer to proofread before the story was published? That would make sense in that that's when beta-reading is supposed to happen, but unfortunately, unless you know the author personally, you'd have to be psychic in order to know the fic needed help before you even saw it.

Or, did the reviewer want you to volunteer after it was published? That suggestion presumes that an author who apparently didn't seek beta-reading at the appropriate time will accept it after the fact because... reasons? Not saying it's impossible, but it's a bit of a stretch.

Either way, it's not anyone's responsibility to go around offering to beta for random strangers. It's the author's responsibility to make sure their work is in good shape before putting it out there for anyone to read and react to. Not that you shouldn't offer concrit or even editing if you feel so moved—that's a really great thing to do—but as the FAQ says somewhere, if it doesn't look like the author put any effort into making the story good to begin with, why should you put in the effort to write a thoughtful and detailed review that will be ignored at best or met with tantrums and flaming at worst? Writing a mission is at least entertaining and may benefit someone else who actually does care about learning to write better.

If you're worried about it, though, you might adopt Araeph's policy of reviewing a fic and seeing what happens before you spork it. If the author responds positively, great! You've helped someone and improved the average quality of fanfiction. If they don't respond or if they get nasty, you can go ahead and spork their work with a clean conscience, knowing that attempting to be nice would be a waste of everyone's time.

~Neshomeh

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