Well, I certainly understand the desire for perfectionism. But if you're holding out for months or even years because of final details when you've already got something presentable, I think that could bite you in the butt. If in the meantime someone else sends in maps, then there's that awkward scenario of: do I put up their maps when I know you were working on yours? We can "call dibs" all we like on the forums, but if other people don't use the forums... I don't really want to say no if someone else sends me good maps, but I'll hate the feeling knowing that someone's work will have gone to waste if there's no reason for me to keep both (especially if neither is blatantly flawed). A more "universal" way of "calling dibs" would probably be to submit what you've got, once you can. Like you said, you can always come back to it to add to it, fix it, etc, and if it's merely presentable but not perfect in your eyes, perhaps once it's out there more publicly, it might spurn you to perfect them sooner than if you just left them on your own hard drive, potentially forgotten, by yourself, even!
Of course there's that issue of submitting the beginnings of something and then not completing it. I hope no one's waiting for the rest of the
Totally Rad (NES) or
Simon The Sorcerer (PC) maps that I started work on ages ago. At this point (or even since way back when) I would be happy if someone else took them on, but the few maps I put up might be a deterrent towards getting the rest of it done, if mappers potentially interested think I would want to finish what I start (which is
usually the case, or even almost always, at least with other projects in my life).
But in the case of your Clock Tower, it's all a single map, is it not? Submitting that would be enough to fend off potential map submission conflicts.
I'm glad you're considering sending what you've got (well, because I bumped this topic
) and I thank you if you do, but really, do want you want, it's not like I need this right this second. If it bothers you too much to send in something less than perfect, then don't. It's just that while there is no one else working on Clock Tower that I know of, that's not to say there couldn't be, so I'm just making a suggestion so that your effort so far won't be for naught, which might be a worse feeling. At 1 and 3/4 years later, I think that's a fair suggestion for me to make...