Recent entries

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1301 Copy

    tleilaxanp

    What is the status of OKAK?

    Will Wight

    It’s going to be a few more months. Because of the complexity of the project, and because I’ve been trying some new processes to make my writing more efficient, I don’t know if that means more like 3 months or more like 6 months.

    I realized a couple of months ago that at the current rate, it was likely to be a whole year since Ghostwater by the time OKAK came out, and that’s a big gap in releases. I have assistants to pay now. So I wrote Underlord, because I basically knew how long that would take to do and that I could use it to cover the long gap between releases.

    I was reluctant to do that, though. I’d like to finish OKAK, both to get it off my plate and because I want to write the ending as much as its fans want to read the ending.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1303 Copy

    manty05

    Is it possible to develop a veil like technique that blocks the Arelius senses.

    Will Wight

    Yes, but it would be difficult, given that Arelius senses pick up physical sensory information, not spiritual. But you could develop a technique that would do it, and carry a construct around that prevented them from spying on you. Either it could scramble the particular threads of madra they’re using, or it could generate a shadow or cloud or whatever that blocked them from picking up anything from within it.

    It would be relatively easier to script a room or container to block them out, but you’d still need to know how.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1307 Copy

    Discord

    Scientific classification of madra

    Will Wight

    If you ask too many questions about the categorization of madra aspects, you’re just not going to get very many satisfying answers out of me.   I didn’t organize it in, like, an elemental chart with categories and everything. There would have been advantages to that, sure, but I wanted to leave it open-ended to some degree.

    Cradle ()
    #1308 Copy

    TransEmo

    The river stones Lindon got from the ruins, and recently lost, did they originally have a purpose that didn’t pan out?

    Will Wight

    Basically yes. They were intended to advance his scripting knowledge in a particular direction.I just ended up going in a very different direction, and all the plans I had along that branch got cut.So the stones ended up being irrelevant.

    TransEmo

    Same for the bag Eithan grabbed for yerin I assume?

    Will Wight

    The only reason he hasn’t given it to her by now is that I keep cutting that scene for space reasons. I might have to upgrade it now that it’s become this big thing.

    The Last Reader

    It would have to be pretty good considering she is now truegold

    Will Wight

    It’s pretty good.  

    The Last Reader

    yay OP stuff

    Will Wight

    It is, and was always intended to be, something that would help her long-term. I’m just now worried that it isn’t dramatic enough to live up to three books of hype, but it is still OP.     So I might have to drama it up a little more.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1309 Copy

    Patriarch Core Split

    What's a good way to really insult or humiliate a sacred artist?  For example, tarring and feathering was popular on the American frontier as a form of mob vengeance that both wounded and embarrassed the victim. Alternatively, is there an insult one sacred artist could deliver to another to force a duel that otherwise would have been backed down from?

    Will Wight

    On the Iceflower continent, there’s a punishment that involves forcibly manifesting the person’s Remnant so that it’s half-merged with your body. It’s both painful and hideous-looking.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1310 Copy

    Reality Spasm

    What conditions result in the generation of either spacial madra/aura, or what types can effect space? What kinds of limitations would you encounter considering that spacetime isn't really a thing here, as far as I can tell?

    Will Wight

    It requires someone of Sage or above, or one of their Remnants/devices, to cause madra to take on space-altering properties. Someone of lower cultivation could get it and cultivate it, but only if someone higher helped them.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1311 Copy

    jecmage

    I have a slight suspicion that 113 is dead. Eithan jokes that if he continues to perform well, that he may have to learn 113's name. Likewise, jai daishou offers the death remnant the severed head of an aurelius servant, one who's name its specifically mentioned he never bothered to learn.

    Will Wight

    I can neither confirm nor deny One-Thirteen’s demise at this time.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1312 Copy

    NYNorthman

    In Ghostwater, right after Ziel uses his gatekey, the Beast King and Ziel have a conversation in which the beast king states

    "Since you seem so willing to help others, I have something to occupy your time. I put a couple of golds on a task for me, and they seem to have gotten themselves stuck. How about you swing by and un-stick them."

    Based on the following paragraphs, and the scene where Ziel intervenes on Yerin's and Mercy's behalf, the Beast King is claiming that he is responsible for Yerin's and Mercy's task.

    My question is what do you all think the task the Beast king was talking about?

    Will Wight

    Yeah, this was my mistake. I should have taken out the line when I took out the other scenes, but I missed it.

    The audiobook is in recording now with this line corrected, btw.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1313 Copy

    Nocturniquet

    Question not related to this thread but.... At one point in the past you mentioned that Kelsa was originally supposed to leave sacred valley with Lindon but you instead created Yerin. Is Kelsa still going to be a relevant character in the series or will she be another Tenten? The 2 friends I got to read the series both liked her.

    Will Wight

    Hm, that's a good question. Hang on to that question. Remember that you asked it.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1314 Copy

    Will Wight

    I do like releasing on the first of the month regardless of the day of the week, but fun fact: weekends are usually lower sales days.

    I don’t know why. Probably sunspots.

    Also, I released Ghostwater on a weekend and Amazon dropped the ball, so it was way late in the US and two days later in the UK. Which I suspect is because it was a weekend.

    So now I’m wary of weekend releases. Wary.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1315 Copy

    Darqfyre

    1. I forget where it is mentioned, but someone says that part of the process of becoming underlord is making a soul vault. Do you think that this might be what happened when Lindon merged w/ that AI? (Again, I'm sorry that I don't remember its name, horrible memory for names combined w/ no time to read the books again.) OR, do you think that was some other sort of bond forged? If I remember right, a person can only have 1 soul vault, so it would be interesting to see how this plays out and what anyone who cares to post thinks.

    2. I wonder if Lindon will jump way ahead of Yerin, so will she have to catch up to him again, or will Lindon once again have to catch up to her with her no longer being restrained since she absorbed the blood shadow?

    3. What would happen if Ethan and Lindon were to spar, since they both have a method of predicting the present actions and how they'll impact the future.

    4. What do you think is going to happen to Lindon's "borrowed" arm when he outranks it? What do you think he'll do to get a replacement?

    Will Wight

    1. That’s not an official soulspace, though it’s a subtle distinction.

    2. This will be thoroughly demonstrated in Underlord! And a recurring theme in future books!

    3. What a great question! Book 7.

    4. His hand will come to life, tearing its way free and strangling him like Ash’s hand from Evil Dead.

    January 2019 - February 2019 (Pre-Underlord) ()
    #1316 Copy

    manty05

    I thought that if in Cradle there is something like the champion agumentation treatments of Asylum(in addition to sacred arts in general) could be be effected by turning humans into a sacred beast (or a dread beast).

    Though turning humans into dread beasts if possible could result into something rather ghoulish.

    Will Wight

    I plan to explore this concept in Book 7. The plan might change, but as of now, it’s something I’m including in 7.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1318 Copy

    Retbull

    How much of Cradle is influenced by Naruto? Is there a larger genre of Asian Martial Arts Magic?

    Will Wight

    Yeah, like the others have said, wuxia and (especially) xianxia stories are a huge genre, and Cradle is my attempt at making one specifically for a Western fantasy novel audience.

    Naruto isn’t actually much of an influence, though I understand why you’d think that. I probably should draw more from Naruto; early Naruto has some really tight storytelling.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1319 Copy

    acog

    I enjoy rule based series like Cradle and I enjoy the audiobooks. 

    Will Wight

    Yeah, I’m happier and happier the more of Travis’ work I hear, and he was my first choice from the beginning. He’s amazing to work with, too.

    I think I may have given you the wrong impression in my earlier comment: I’m not looking for restrictions or “rules” for my next series. But there’s an interesting scenario that comes up fairly regularly that I’m trying to get to the bottom of.

    Because people often ask for English novels similar to the Cradle series, and the suggestions they get are not very much like Cradle. It’s Sufficiently Advanced Magic, Dakota Krout’s books, Mother of Learning, etc.

    I’m not saying anything negative about any of those books, they’re just not very similar to Cradle. SAM and MoL are JRPGs with a heavy focus on technical magic and a protagonist getting stronger by improving skill, not by improving through a cultivation system. Dakota Krout’s first series is a dungeon core series and his second series is a VRMMO LitRPG.

    The plot, setting, characters, and even subgenre are different.

    The cultivation element is the way in which Cradle is most similar to those series, and even so it is executed WILDLY differently in each series.

    It makes me wonder what elements people are identifying in Cradle that resonate with them, so I can understand my readers better. I’m trying to drill deeper into what it is that people are reallyenjoying.

    And it also suggests to me that there’s a market out there for more series similar to Cradle. And I don’t think the big appeal comes from the East Asian mythological style elements; I suspect that the superficial stylings could be easily changed.

    So anyway, when people catch up to Cradle, they’re hungry for something similar. But what is it they’re really hungry for? That’s what I’m trying to figure out.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1320 Copy

    Mike

    If the world is so large.... does gravity not work the same way in this universe?

    Daniel

    The planet may be hollow or it may be made of less dense matter or the gravitational constant could be significantly lower in the universe or yeah it could be magic. Though if humans exist it must have some relation to the basic model or they wouldn't be human.

     

    Will Wight

    Daniel's right.Part of the answer is "magic," and part of it is how this world developed differently because of magic.

     

    a few moments later....

    Two users now argue at length about the subject of the physics of such a large world.... we skip to Will's next comment.

    Will Wight

    Since it looks like this has become a real discussion, I'll give a real answer!

    I made Cradle very big. Why? A few reasons.

    First, a lot of wuxia and xianxia stories do it so they can scale up to ridiculous numbers. Where first the character thinks a huge city has ten thousand people, later a huge city has ten BILLION people.

    Also, they're so special they're not just one in a million, they're one in a TRILLION! And they go from crossing a thousand miles in a single step to a hundred thousand miles!

    So in part, it's an homage to the genre.

    In part, it's so that I can set other stories in the same world and they've never even heard of the people, places, or events in Lindon's story.

    And inpart it's to illustrate that this isn't Earth. The Iterations are Narnia-style "worlds," not different planets, but since it's a whole new universe each time, they are ALSO different planets.

    I wanted a way to show that without putting a second moon in the sky, so "greater surface area and population" it is.

    ***

    As for the mechanics of it: I said "Magic" earlier, but that basically boils down to "This is how vital aura works."

    Vital aura is the power of the world that sacred artists harvest and use to strengthen their madra. It's the spirit of the world, basically. It makes what would otherwise be an uninhabitable planet, habitable.

    The planet IS less dense than earth, but because of its huge volume, it's more massive. Gravity is much greater. Humans are supported by madra from birth in part because otherwise they wouldn't be able to adapt to the gravity.

    You have other problems too: does this less-dense core spin fast enough to create a magnetosphere? Wouldn't continents bigger than Earth's just be massive deserts everywhere except immediately along the coast? Wouldn't the surface of such a planet be wracked by storms?

    Vital aura!

    I'll get into it later in the books, but for me building this world, aura served a couple of functions. First, it allows people to adapt to what would otherwise be very harsh natural conditions (Sacred Valley and the immediate surrounding areas have, so far, been very mild. Conditions will accelerate as we get deeper into Cradle). Second, vital aura is generated by natural forces AND it changes natural forces.

    I'll continue showing how it works in future books, but the bottom line is that aura allows me to have thriving ecosystems where everything is fire-aspect: trees with burning fruit pollinated by insects with wings of flame, and so on and so forth. Same in the depths of the ocean and on the tops of clouds.

    It's magic. But it DOES work consistently according to a set of rules, and it DOES interact with physics.

    However, I'm not as attached to real-world physics as Brandon Sanderson is. He enjoys figuring out the physical implications of every nuance in his magic systems. I do not enjoy that, so I will not be doing it.

    If there's a gap between real physics and magic, I'll be filling in that gap with magic. Not physics. Just a personal preference.

    Jeremiah

    You may not enjoy figuring out how magic interacts with and is subject to physics, but I would feel sure you wouold enjoy the fact that Sanderson has done so.

    Will Wight

    Jeremiah, what I like and appreciate is all the thought and planning that Sanderson puts into developing his magic system, and how clear the rules usually are. AND what an impact they always have on the surrounding society.That's cool, and I know from experience that it's very hard to do.But as for him figuring out all the details of how his magic interacts with physics...no, I don't really care.Harry Potter magic doesn't interact with physics, and yet each individual book in the series has a very tight magic system (the series as a WHOLE doesn't, because some magic introduced in a later book could have solved problems in an earlier book, but each book on its own is very consistent).As long as the rules and abilities are clear to me, great! I don't care if they're consistent with known physics or not. Where does the extra mass go when Professor McGonnagall turns into a cat? Magic.

    April

    I may be weird, but yes, things like that bug me. Less in fantasy as the author can say "because magic" and it works (though some take that to an extreme, which usually is enough to turn me off from a book) but in sci-fi that is a definite deal-breaker)

       

    Will Wight

    Apparently that's a pretty common view, April, and that's fine!

    I'm just saying that MY tolerance for physics-defying shenanigans is pretty high, as long as it's consistent within the work. If a character survives getting hit by a tactical missile and then is threatened by a knife, Will is not happy.

    But if we're getting into the realm of "Dragons could never grow that large because their bones couldn't support their own body weight," or "A conjuration spell could never work because it adds mass to the universe," then I don't care.

    It's fantasy. Magic > Physics.

    Footnote: *pre Blackflame