DreamForge, a magazine of science and fantasy fiction, focusing on speculative stories, demonstrating enduring and indomitable parts of the human spirit.
Two covers. One vision. The special alternate cover edition of DreamForge Issue 18 was designed to complement the standard edition, creating a unique collector's pair unlike anything we've done before. Buy it on Amazon: https://t.co/jrRzo3PYov
DreamForge Anvil 24 is launched! Issue 24 brings together stories of wonder, humor, hope, and imagination. Read free online or available as an ebook.
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Crows ask questions. Elephants remember their dead. Dolphins share maps of the sea. But the animals we raise for food...do they have something to say too? Hap Aziz’s First Words tells us of a possible future.
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Every writer eventually hits the sign: Road Closed. The mistake? Staring at the barricade. In this practical, energizing article, Wulf Moon shares real detours around writer’s block — so you can get back to the open road.
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Some stories deserve more than a screen. DreamForge’s print edition gives every story space to breathe — with full-color pages and original illustrations. Grab your copy on Amazon.
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We build sheltered places for a reason. But eventually, something — or someone — nudges us toward the wider world. In The Boy and the Turtle, a Fairytale, Leo Rose Rodriguez gives us a quiet, powerful tale about that moment.
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Death is supposed to be inevitable. Efficient. Final. But when a ghost mariachi band shows up and Darren doesn't die as expected, what happens next?
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Before the bard, Gwen, is delivered to her fate, she has one final chance to shape the narrative. In Fifteen Silver, Alexandra Wingo gives us a fantasy about power — not the kind that swings swords, but the kind that shapes hearts.https://t.co/eOEi7PEHIr
A magazine you can hold. Stories you won’t forget. DreamForge brings speculative fiction to life in a beautifully designed print edition with artwork for every story. Available now on Amazon.
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We often imagine the future in spaceships and AI. Sometimes it arrives in steel plants and power systems. Editor Scot Noel's Hope Notes: The End of Steam explores a quiet revolution that could change everything.https://t.co/trE8CRqTYH
Speculative fiction should do more than entertain — it should shift how you see the world. Explore the latest DreamForge issue online.
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A Guide to Helping Your House Elf , by Teresa Milbrodt, is about stress, expectation, exhaustion — and the small mercies that make the next day possible for you and your house elf.
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What happens when your comfort becomes a confinement? Brandon Case’s The Indoor Prince begins with kibble and sunbeams — and turns into a charming and poignant tale of boundaries, fear, and growth.https://t.co/D3jAfrqEil
In 1947, Isaac Asimov wrote "Little Lost Robot." The BotQ factory in San Jose, CA has reached a production speed of 1 humanoid robot per hour with their third generation F.03. I suspect the videographers here know that story. Watch to the end. https://t.co/VAtQ6pNDcQ
Today's Word: Velitation
A minor skirmish or playful argument; light sparring of words or ideas. From Latin velitari (to skirmish lightly). Is Kirk or Picard the better starship captain? Hint: it's Janeway. Let the velitation begin.
Science fiction often asks what we can do. In First Words, Hap Aziz asks what we’ll do once we can no longer pretend we don’t understand. It's a story that will linger with you.
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If you write long enough, you will hit a writer's block. The key isn’t panic. It’s navigation. Wulf Moon’s latest article is full of practical strategies to keep your creative engine running.
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In 1917, two Yorkshire girls fooled the man who created Sherlock Holmes with paper cutouts and hatpins. The same machinery that fooled him is in your phone today (and in your head). https://t.co/EFjiNN2gMz