Ya, depends on the area for sure. rain can pommel a place and miss 10 miles away. Bizarre! Of course, it's also majorly dependent on soil types & quality and when you got your seed in this year. If you got your stuff in super early and avoided a frost, you beez looking pretty good now. As bad as it looks, if we get rain in 2 weeks, it could pull some thru. I road over the pinneapple corn on my farm yesterday with the tractor, figured it wasn't gonna do anything and I needed a path to spray some NWSG's What I road over were 2 rows next to the timber. The trees & vegetation are fighting and taking moisture away from corn just 10' away and we'll easily lose 2 rows just from that. Personally, if you're in the "middle ground" of some previous rain, decent soil, planted right - I still think you'll do "OK" this year. Like my buddy has killer ground, used to 200-220 bushels, year in, year out - and thats not exxagerating. Had dinner with him last night (farms are in one of best counties in Illinois) said his worst case with this no rain continuiing and drought would be 140-150 bushells. suppose we could turn into a desert & get worse BUT most of the time it's not as bad in the end as you think it will be.