User blog comment:The Kaufman/Germanic challenge - Voting!/@comment-24425594-20150920105607

So my votes are:

+1 to Idoburgish. First of all, I'm a selfish asshole and care about my conlangs the most. Second, I wanted to frig it up and I've frigged it up. Third, I've succeeded in mocking Limburgish. I think so, at least. Now the drawbacks: a lot of the sound changes were redundant and/or marginal and alas I was (and am, and will be) too lazy to clear them up, and I think I still have to provide a lot of info about the inflection.

+1 to Selingian. That's the funniest jokelang I've seen in a while. Good work, ED. The relay won't be as fun with Selingian being in the end though.

-1 to Swamp Gothic. First, you've chosen the wrong place. Ukraine wasn't a part of Czechoslovakia. Second, the word "ukrašodo" freaked me out, and it was the second of two things that freaked me out. How come an unchanged Russian word occured in a language that is spoken in rural Ukraine? I'm interested. That's not counting the a/o, ā/ō > o/a sound change followed by "a, ā > o, a" later, which seems redundant, but hey I've got lots of them. Would give it a -2 but one point for overall smooth-ness.

(Dis)honorable mentions:

Boyait. I've actually wanted to yell "Dafuq?" when I finished reading the page, mostly because of the article-based declension. Also, the sound changes seem way too unrealistic for the area it's spoken in. It's rather sane in everything else though.

Karahien. "Dafuq?" at everything. Nonsensical sound changes, unclear syntax, tables, and way more. Would give it a -2 or even a -3 if this sjiet wasn't that awful and if I wouldn't care about everything else.