Guest Post = Brian Freyermuth

Brian Freyermuth has had a lot of fun over the last 20 years writing video games and novels. His first game, the original Fallout, won countless awards and was featured at the Smithsonian, while his next title had him working with William Shatner, George Takei and Walter Koenig on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy. In 2012, he created a little bit of Disney history with Marv Wolfman by giving Oswald the Lucky Rabbit a voice for the first time in the game Epic Mickey 2: the Power of Two.Creating the Sundancer series, which Brian co-authors with his wife, Juliet, has been an exhilarating process. In Demon Dance , private investigator turned novelist Nick St. James seeks help from a cranky voodoo houngan, a role-playing vampire, and Norse goddess to find out what killed his sister-in-law before it kills an innocent mother and daughter. In the sequel, Mind of the Beast , Nick races against time to find out why the Green Man keeps infecting people, animals and deities.Brian dropped in to talk about Story - one of our favourite subjects here at Bristol Book Blog:
Story: Finding the Pieces in Novels and GamesI’m asked all the time about what is the similar between writing a novel and designing a video game. There are many, but the most important part is story. It’s about creating a world, grabbing the reader or player by the hand and taking them through the twists and turns of the character’s life.
A great example was when I first joined the team working on the original Fallout. I had been writing novels and short stories for years. All of them were atrocious, but a great starting point for my newbie days at Interplay. What I learned on Falloutopened my eyes to a whole new way of writing. Fallout was an open world game, where you could go anywhere, anytime you wanted. How do you write a story when the player can discover the clues in a different order?" Think of it like this. In my novel Demon Dance, the story unfolds at my pace. The main character, Nick, dives into the mystery about who killed his sister-in-law, and you’re there when he finds her body. When he talks to Fay, the local librarian who just happens to be a Norse Goddess, you’re there too. It’s a linear journey from A to B.


Published on June 22, 2015 03:45
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