- For information on the evaluation criteria used at OC ReMix, please see Submission Standards and Instructions.
Contents
Who are they and what do they do?
- For the list of current panelists, please see Staff.
- For panelists throughout OCR's history, please see List of current & former judges.
OverClocked ReMix began in late 1999 with founder djpretzel evaluating all submissions personally. As the site grew, the job of evaluating submissions became too large for one person. In early 2002, after a community poll of ReMixers chose the most acceptable solution, djpretzel established the judges panel to decide (with his oversight) which submissions best fulfill the vision for OCR. The judges were initially chosen and invited by djpretzel, but since then have been added or removed based on panel consensus, with djpretzel's input.
Before a submission is sent to the judges panel for evaluation, it goes through an initial review by djpretzel or a designated member of the judges panel. As a result of this review, submissions are either rejected outright, forwarded to the panel for consideration, or accepted without further evaluation.
Decisions on submissions forwarded to the panel are reached by a majority of a panel quorum; a unanimous vote will be closed after three negative votes or four positive votes. A split decision will be closed after a difference of three votes (e.g. 5 YES's vs. 2 NO's), or extended to a majority vote at the request of a judge. In addition to his power to veto any submission regardless of the panel's decision, djpretzel may also serve as an expediting vote, a tiebreaker during particularly divisive decisions, as well as a guide on where the overall acceptance bar should be.
General requirements for consideration
Community members often ask how they can become a judge; the judges panel does not have an open interview process. When a panel vacancy opens, it is typically not announced until after a group consensus regarding candidates. When the panel decides a new judge will be necessary, candidates must demonstrate the following qualifications prior to or during an evaluation:
- Musical knowledge (formal music theory knowledge and instrument/performance experience are not requirements);
- A strong grasp of current OCR standards and guidelines as expressed in evaluation of ReMixes on the site, through submissions, and/or during the candidate evaluation process;
- Ability to clearly and constructively advise artists as to how they can refine and improve their material;
- Strong communication skills;
- Openness to all musical styles/genres;
- Extensive commitment to the community;
- Ability to work proactively with the variety of artists and personalities in the community; and
- Time, availability, and enthusiasm for the workload involved.
Many people who want to be judges or are considered as judges fall short in at least one of those areas. Because the process of choosing judges is not open, candidates who feel they may be qualified to become a judge are discouraged from lobbying judges to obtain a position on the panel.
What percentage of submissions are accepted?
The total acceptance rate of all music sent to OCR's Submissions Inbox ranges between 10-15%. The acceptance rate of music forwarded to the judges panel ranges between 15-20%.
After initial review, about 45% of all submissions are rejected with no further evaluation, 50% are forwarded to the judges panel for further evaluation, and 5% are accepted with no further evaluation (also known as a 'direct post').
A submission that is directly posted vs. posted after panel evaluation is neither better nor worse; oftentimes submissions are sent to the panel out of unfamiliarity with the source material, a desire to provide feedback, or because a precedent is being set in some way.
Why is the acceptance bar so high?
Since the panel's inception in early 2002, the bar for evaluating ReMixes has gradually but substantially risen. As the site's vision and standards became clearer and the number of submissions increased, this change was necessary to maintain a consistent posting schedule and to give each posted ReMix the time and attention it deserves. Even with the high bar that's been set, OC ReMix is a hobbyist community, so the bar purposefully remains below a professional bar, especially on production.
Why are there so many rejections in a row?
Unlike rejections, the judges' decisions on each accepted ReMix are not made public (i.e. moved into the Judges Decisions forum) until the ReMix is posted onto OCR's front page. As a result, there may be instances where the first 1-3 pages of decisions seem to all be rejections without a single acceptance.
My submission was rejected. What if I strongly disagree or want more clarification?
- To appeal a decision, message a judge, email us at admin@ocremix.org, or use our Contact form.
OCR takes the integrity and consistency of the judging process seriously. Whenever an artist strongly disagrees with a straightforward rejection of their submission (e.g. 3 NOs, 1 YES/4 NOs), or feels the feedback was unclear or impractical, the judges are willing to revisit it, and have — on rare occasion — reversed their original decision.
The judges are expected to frame their votes, particularly rejections, in the context of the arrangement and production criteria in the Submission Standards, as well as provide constructive criticism. We ask artists to respect the judges and the judging process when challenging a decision.
How long does it take for a submission to be judged?
- To receive more timely feedback for your arrangement before submitting it, please post in the Post Your Game ReMixes section of the Workshop forums.
- To view how far initial reviews have reached into the Submissions Inbox, as well as which submissions are currently being evaluated, recently rejected, or accepted and awaiting postage to OCR's main page, please see Currently in the Judging Process.
OC ReMix is run by an all-volunteer staff, including the judging process. Submissions currently take 3 months, at most, to receive initial review. Once the initial review is complete, if the submission is neither rejected nor accepted without further evaluation, it is forwarded to the judges panel. Due to the lengthy queue in the Judges Panel, panel evaluation currently takes 12 months, at most. The speed of the judging process depends on a variety of factors including judge availability, familiarity with source material, and disputed votes requiring the attention of a greater number of judges.
Resubmissions
Resubmissions that are meaningfully revised after a past rejection can be expedited back to the judges panel at any time. When submitting a resubmission, please include "RESUBMISSION" in your subject line or message, and a link to the previous judges decision.
What do the votes mean?
To track each decision's vote count, judges end their votes with a "YES" or "NO", sometimes with qualifications. Always read the full votes to see each judgement's context.
- YES
"YES" means a winner is you!
- YES (borderline) & NO (borderline)
"Borderline" means the judge feels a track was very close to the line of acceptance, with significant issues that either were or weren't dealbreakers, and possibly could flip their vote after further consideration.
Some judges expect their words to speak for themselves and don't write "borderline" next to their YES or NO vote.
- YES (conditional)
"YES (conditional)" means the judge feels a track should pass, but ONLY after a required fix that could easily be done in a few minutes, e.g. low encoding, low or excessive volume levels or compression, rendering issues, audio glitches, abrupt cutoff in the middle of an ending or fadeout.
A "YES (conditional)" isn't used for mixing or arranging critique, and is rare. Since conditional votes can only become unreserved YESs after fixes are made, but otherwise aren't NOs, they're considered neutral in vote counts until all judges have voted. If a decision is reached with enough unreserved YESs, desired fixes from conditional YESs aren't required.
- ? (undecided)
Judges often mark undecided opinions with a "?" and may revisit them later.
- NO (resubmit)
"NO (resubmit)" or "NO (please resubmit)" means the judge encourages a resubmission after revisions but doesn't necessarily feel the track was borderline. The judge feels the track could pass with improvements and/or feels a revision attempt could benefit the artist, even if the track ultimately might not pass.
Some judges expect their words to speak for themselves and don't write "resubmit" next to their NO vote.
- NO
"NO" generally means a lot of work would be needed before being accepted.
- NO (override)
"NO (override)" means a track made it to the judges panel but turned out to be a clear Submissions Standards violation, e.g. there's little-to-no interpretation, there's heavy sampling of original audio without meaningful modifications, it's a MIDI rip, it's stolen, the source material wasn't video game music.
A "NO (override)" isn't used as a quality judgement, is very rare, and automatically closes a vote, which must be corroborated by another judge.
- djpretzel vetoes
djp founded OC ReMix as a home for interpretive VGM arrangements, and his vision sets OCR's Submissions Standards. Overall, he trusts the judges panel more than himself for these calls, and has consistently said that the panel collectively has a tougher, higher, and better bar than he does. However, if he feels a YES decision by the judges was far off the mark, he can veto an approved track. This has only happened a few times since the panel's formation in 2002.
Are the judges biased?
Though the evaluation process is partially subjective by design, the judges panel does its best to eliminate personal and collective bias when evaluating submissions. Individual judges will frequently be in positions where they either reject something they enjoy or accept something they do not personally care for. The fact that OCR employs a panel of anywhere between 7-13 judges also helps compensate for dissenting votes that may hinge on personal bias, improperly applying the standards and guidelines, being too lenient, or being too harsh.
Factors that have no bearing on judges' decisions include:
- The submission's genre or enjoyability;
- The submission's release on other platforms;
- The submission's recency or oldness;
- The game or original music being arranged;
- The amount of time spent creating the submission;
- The cost of the samples, instruments, or equipment used;
- An artist's tenure in the community or prior submissions outcomes;
- An artist's experience level, temperament, or openness to feedback;
- An artist's following, notoriety, or connections;
- An artist's praise or criticisms about OCR;
- An artist's personal differences with the staff or community;
- An artist's promotional or financial support of OCR; and
- Being a member of the staff or judges panel.
In other words, don't overthink or politicize the process. The Submission Standards on arrangement and production are ultimately what guide the judges' evaluations.
Why not allow ReMixes to be approved by popular vote?
OverClocked ReMix fosters a sense of community built upon the common goal of highlighting high-quality video game music arrangements made by amateurs and professionals alike and making them easily available to those who appreciate this subset of music. A popular vote system does not work in OC ReMix's case because most fans are not interested with whether a submission fits OCR's standards and guidelines.
OCR's evaluation process and judges panel are established to spotlight excellent content by any video game music fan or mainstream music listener's standards. While the lack of popular participation in the submissions process may frustrate some, as a whole, OCR fans understand the necessity of the judges panel and trust that the decisions it makes are ultimately in the best interests of the site.