Five things worth knowing from the indie sci-fi and fantasy world this week.
- Onyx Storm is the market. Not a symbol of romantasy dominance — the thing itself. Fastest-selling adult novel in 20 years. Authors not thinking about how to deliver emotional intimacy alongside genre mechanics are leaving audience on the table.
- The Bartz v. Anthropic settlement — $1.5 billion, all claims filed as of March 30 — is the largest AI-copyright case in history. It will set precedent. If you are using AI tools in your writing process, the legal landscape is actively unsettled in a way that could matter to your rights and your work.
- Dark academia is rising. This is not a niche. It is a reading posture — gothic, intellectually serious, morally ambiguous — that readers are actively seeking. Writers working in this space are finding underserved audiences.
- Indie authors face six major shifts in 2026: platform changes, AI integration, reader acquisition evolution, and more. The landscape that worked in 2023 is measurably different from 2026. Strategy needs to follow.
- Editor impersonation scams are getting sophisticated. AI-personalized messages from fake Big 5 editors referencing networks of producers and investors are a real threat. Verify before engaging. Never send material based on unsolicited interest.
More analysis in the Fantasy section.

