

I got creative freedom, the ability to work with fun people, a chance to work with some interesting limitations, a chance to dip my toes into video games (they also let me do a draft on the script for the second game), and a chance to play with transmedia. I think our world is going to change in interesting ways as books, video games, and cinema meld together.

I got to play with the idea of blending entertainment media, the story is for sale in-game, and together with the game, blends storytelling with gameplay.

I had a blast with it, and it turned out quite well. (I’ve always envied Orson Scott Card, for example, who worked on the original Monkey Island, one of the great games of all time.) I took on the project partially because the guys I was working with were so much fun, but also because, as a gamer, I’ve always had a bit of an itch to be involved in video games in one way or another. Well, I’ve also found that interesting limitations in writing can force me to grow and stretch in different ways as a writer. I’ve often said that interesting limitations make for interesting magic systems in books. The game developers had some ideas, but they told me I could do anything at all that I wanted. My challenge was to take things placed into the game because of mechanics, and actually build magic systems, a world, characters, and a story to match them. They had built a video game (a very fun one, by the way) that was very popular. They gave me complete creative freedom, yet I also had some pretty strong constraints. However, after a little back-and-forth, I realized that this project had the potential to be a whole lot of fun. I initially downplayed the Infinity Blade offer. Last year, this itch was scratched by The Alloy of Law and Death by Pizza. I’ve said over and over again that one of the ways I stay fresh when working on large projects is by doing things I haven’t done before. I’ve reached a point, due in no small part to luck of the draw, that I’m capable of passing on any project I want and writing only the things that interest me. Why are you writing a video game adaptation?” My answer is simple: I can do it because I’m a big bestselling author. You might be asking, “Brandon, you are a big bestselling author.
