Opinion

Pottermore: Early access falls short for ardent fans

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I like to think that my life is an open book.Β  I really don’t hold much back here in my column, and I’ve been quite honest about my opinions on a variety of topics.

But it’s about time I come clean.Β  What I’m about to share with you is a dirty little secret of mine, a confession really.Β  Forgive me, Father, for I am a Harry Potter addict.

I was introduced to the drug *cough β€” books* back in 1999, when the series really took off in the States.Β  Since then, an obsession has unfolded, consuming 12 years of my life β€” my entire childhood, really.

This isn’t your typical mild-mannered, general approval or liking of the Harry Potter series.Β  It is a way of life.Β  I attended nearly every midnight premiere of both the books and movies, dressed up, of course (Harry would expect no less of me).

I feverishly devoured all of the books the night they came out, becoming a hermit of sorts in my bedroom.Β  My family had to send out rescue squads.Β  It was serious.

I even cried when I turned 11 and didn’t receive my letter from Hogwarts.Β  I was utterly devastated. But my inner 11 year-old felt vindicated this year when she learned that J.K. Rowling was going to launch Pottermore, a β€œunique online Harry

Potter experience.”

Users can travel on the Hogwarts Express, visit Hogsmeade and get sorted into Houses (virtually, of course).Β  All at once, my eyes grew wide and I couldn’t help but smile.Β  Finally, I would get my Hogwarts letter.Β  Nine years late.Β  But better late than never.

Starting on July 31, and continuing for seven days, hopeful Potter fans could try to find the β€œMagical Quill,” which would ask a trivia question about one of the books.Β  If answered correctly, one would be assigned a username and be granted early access to the site.Β  Those who found the Quill would be allowed in on a staggering basis.Β  The site will open to the rest of the Muggle world in October.

So, like the devout Harry Potter fan that I am, I stalked the site for days, trying to find the Quill.Β  Finally, miraculously, on the fifth day, it appeared to me and I was assigned a username.

Giddy and overjoyed, I could not wait to get on the computer and leave the Muggle world behind me.Β  I reread my confirmation email more carefully and it said that I would have to wait a few weeks to be allowed into the site.Β  I slumped in my seat, disappointed.Β  A few weeks?Β  That’s a little vague.Β  Brush it off, Killion.Β  Patience is a virtue.

The excitement of my confirmation email to Pottermore has faded.Β  It’s been nearly six weeks, and still no word from Pottermore.Β  In just a little more than two weeks, it will be open to the rest of the world.Β  It makes me wonder why I spent hours trying to gain early access.

When I was 11 and didn’t receive my letter, I tried to give Hogwarts the benefit of the doubt.Β  It takes an owl a long time to cross the pond, I justified.

But Pottermore has no such excuse.Β  I would have had very few problems waiting a few days, but six weeks is really starting to test my patience. Β  I feel misled by Pottermore.

I was promised early access, but with the site going public in just a few weeks, I still have yet to reap the rewards that go along with such a privilege. I almost want to avoid Pottermore at all costs once it opens in October as a sign of protest.Β  But I don’t think my discontent will be enough to keep me away from Diagon Alley or Quidditch Matches. Β  Still, the magic seems a little less magical after such a long wait.

Opinion

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May 2, 2025

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