For what it's worth, I like the Dragon CIvil War plot, simply because of the fallout that it's generating. By tradition, a dragon going tooth-n-claw with another means that one of 'em ain't walking away, so, they have proxy wars instead, which means that PCs get hired to do things.
And plots that involve the PCs doing things are GOOD, while plots that say, "You sit around and watch two immortals duke it out. Look at how cool they are!" is BAD.
As for magic, yeah, the artifacts leaned on that side of things, and a bunch of the plots over the past few years have as well since magic is what separates Shadowrun from other cyberpunk, but you're not the only one who's noticed that too much of on flavor spoils the meal. I'm not a big magic guy, so my stuff might invoke magic but revolves around people. It doesn't matter if someone's awesome new security system was bypassed by groovy tech, a neat spell, or somebody using chewing gum and a pocket mirror ... what matters is that the security system was defeated and that now somebody has a Thing that you've been hired to track down and bring back.
Anytime I can bring things down to Earth, I'm gonna try.

There're a ton of freelancers now (Around 40, I think?), each of which has their own vision and desires, some of which are more magically-inclined than others, ome of which are more technical than others, some hate Elves, some love Elves, and, in general, everyone's at their best when something really catches their imagination. Keep an eye out, see what books are announced and what things are on the way, and if you feel like something's missing, feel free to say so! Helps figure out where issues are to be addressed.
One of the things I dig about PDFs, and keep in mind, I'm very much a books kind of guy, is that they allow a focus on some small segment that would never stand on its own. Let's say that I wanted to do a book on the "Black Box", a Mitsuhama Computer Technologies arcology in Philadelphia. Maps, details of the floors, information about the people who run the thing and stuff it makes, how it's effected the local community, etc etc etc. It trips my trigger, and there are some arcology-lovers in the Shadowrun fandom, as well as sociology people, but let's be honest, how many copies of this book would sell in normal release? Enough to recoup printing costs? Unlikely. As a PDF, however, it can be made for a much smaller sum, allowing it to break even with a fraction of the sales, which gives it a chance for life. I'd have to write up a proposal and float it upstairs, they'd try and gauge if there's support for it and if it would fit into the product line, and we'd talk about it from there.
I'm rambling.
Hushing up now.
