The past week I've been working on a vertical slice of our Facebook game. My job is to write the narrative that drives the player from area to area, to identify or invent all the tools(ie weapons, fieldware, armor, clothes) that the player will utilize during their adventure and create a "shot list" for the game, ie shots we want/need to capture to convey what is going on to the user. It's an interesting excercise in that it quickly tells you what you can/cannot do, ie if a sequence is too ambitious to represent, cut it and come up with something else!
We're going to be doing 2 photoshoots this summer. One in the US with some of the people at BDSCI (don't bother looking it up, they don't have a website) and then another overseas, most likely in Dubai to collect location shots. After the game is up and running we've discussed releasing a coffee table book with all the photos from the first "chapter" in high res for people to enjoy outside of the game. As you can imagine, our stuff is going to look a bit different than some of the other games that are out there.
We also settled on an artist to begin work on the BPRE graphic novel. We had a call this week and the artist will begin work on a style sheet shortly. We're still not 100% if the book will be color or B+W. I like both and I think either could work. I'm desperately trying to get the screenplay wrapped but it isn't easy with all the client work we've been running. I have a ton of notes laying out some scenes that had needed more...tissue.It's pretty insane how far the story has come since we switched our locations from Mars to Earth.
Been reading up all the books I can by David Ignatius. Started with Agents of Innocenceand then read Body of Lies: A Novel (Movie Tie-In). Agents is definitely the better read...maybe because when reading Body of Lies I had a pretty good idea of what was in the coming pages. Just ordered his new one, The Increment: A Novel, just shipped. I'm hoping it's killer ^_^;
I used to read nothing but scifi. Now, I feel like good sf is few and far. One trend I've become increasingly aware of is a sf author will get a great start. Fast paced adrenalin rush or super complex intrigue story...250-350 pages...Boom and we're out. By book 3 they are pushing 600 pages and much of it is not the gripping/ass kickery I originally signed on for. I suppose one cannot do the same thing forever but...I ordered Twisted Metal by Tony Ballentine a few weeks ago after Neal Asher raved about it in his blog, theSkinner. It's scheduled to ship any day now...sigh.
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Did you ever check out Ken Macleod? The Fall Revolution series is amazing, if a little bit 'what would Trotsky do?' at times. The Cassini Division is particularly interesting; it's a war between cloned mindstates uploaded into machinery and some bewildered, frightened humans. On Jupiter.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the graphic novel :)
I checked out Macleod a few years ago. I can't recall if it was Newton's Wake or Cosmonaut Keep or it was just plain boring. LOL
ReplyDeleteI recently checked out Ian McDonald's "River of the Gods" which was really killer :) Though the follow up book of short stories left a lot to be desired...(Why I even mention this is because I thought they were the same writer up to 30 seconds ago...whoops).
Non sequiturs aside...I see the first volume is out of print. If you think it's killer, I'll wish list it and give it a shot next month when I burn through my current selection.
j