Recent entries

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1361 Copy

    Kandra

    So, I've been basing the sacred artist robes on the Hanfu (and a mix of other traditional clothing in ancient East Asia), is this more or less the correct? Should I be basing them off something more modern?

    Will Wight

    Nope, that's the right direction. I intentionally don't give too much detail because I don't want people to get hung up on whether they're belted from the left or from the right or whatever, but I did research on all sorts of traditional Chinese, Korean, and Taoist martial arts clothing before writing.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1363 Copy

    Lil' Blue

    Oh, here's a legit one. In Sword Unclean, you mentioned pure aura, is that a typo or is that a retcon?

    Will Wight

    It's not a retcon, so it was probably a typo. Without looking it up, I suspect I meant "pure __ aura," with the blank filled in by whatever type of aura he was talking about.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1364 Copy

    MountainKing

    Do cores convert a Sacred Artist's physical mass into madra, to create more madra?

    Will Wight

    Pure madra is actually generated by the way the human body processes life aura and blood aura. It really is the interaction of body, mind, and spirit, in a sense.

    MountainKing

    So a sacred artist's body is naturally consuming blood, dream, and life aura? 

    Will Wight

    Basically, yeah.

    MountainKing

    What kind of benefits do Cradlites get for doing that?

    Will Wight

    The ability to use madra.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1368 Copy

    rdmooch

    I have not posted on here before, but with book three coming out Monday I though I would list some of the questions I have about the Cradle series. Learning about the world and magic systems of fantasy books is one of my favorite past-times. Not all of my questions are meet to be taken seriously they are just fun little things my mind comes up with.

    1. Who does all of the farming in Cradle? In a society so focused on martial martial abilities. Who would waste time on farming? We know the population of Cradle is many times greater then Earth. So tens of billion of people need to eat. The only real solution I could think of is if there are Paths that happen to both greatly help agriculture and has combat potential. Or as we saw in book two slavery. 

    2. How will Lindon act the first time he meets someone weaker then him? While Lindon has gotten to what I would call half-iron (his cores are half the size they should be so he levels them up faster then he normal would, and only one avenged to iron) and that makes him stronger then most people his age in the Sacred Valley. Knowing that and meeting them while stronger then them are different. I bring this up because out side of a few people everyone we have met seems to have no trouble "bullying" those weaker then themselves. I know this is a might makes right society but still part of the honor of that system is to ingore/protect those weaker then you. If you only follow those "laws" when other are watching you then that's not honor its saving face. When will we meet people who follow these codes of conduct not for themselves or for "face" but because they believe in them?

    3. Would a fire path be one of the fastest way to level up? All you would have to do is stand next to a barn-fire and absorb the ambient fire manna it would give off, then refine it. On that note how different would the manna type be, between different types of fire. A hearth-fire warming a family home in the winter, with all the "happy" connotation that come with it, compared to like an arson attack destroying someone's home and possession and just everything that they have worked for. Both are fire but you get what I mean.

    Will Wight

    There are a lot of responses to these questions, and I'm not confident in my ability to parse every one of them, so I'm just going to answer your questions as best I can. And I apologize if someone else has already done so.

    1.) There are Paths that are used for agriculture and irrigation, they're just usually low-key. There's a (very) brief reference in Blackflame to the Redflower family, who are in charge of feeding the Empire. By law, they are neutral in every conflict, and anybody who starts a fight with them or tries to pressure them will soon regret it.

    2.) This is 100% a spoiler.

    3.) A fire Path would not be the fastest way to advance, because the aura would be slightly rarer and harder to collect compared to, say, earth or air. But it's still very fast, as are all the Paths that draw from aura easily found in nature.

    There WOULD be significant differences between those two Paths! Fire from different Paths could take on different qualities depending on how it's used an where it comes from; you could have a gentle flame that spreads slowly and provides lots of even warmth, versus a violent flames that consumes rapidly and burns out quickly.

     

    Evan

    Let us not forget that Eithan the OP Underlord is a janitor/sewer keeper. 

    So clearly people either follow mundane Paths, or perform mundane services in addition to their path. E.g. little girl cutting stone blocks with her fingers when Lindon/Yerin get to the Five Factions camp.

       

    Will Wight

    Different places in the world handle the basic necessities of life differently. Some places have sects that focus entirely on farming or whatever, but other places prize independence and self-sufficiency. Those sacred artists value the ability to provide food, resources, and basic societal infrastructure for the people that depend on them.

    Footnote: *Pre-Blackflame
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1369 Copy

    Daniel

    How advanced is their scientific understanding on cradle? Cause I mean I know they have lots of knowledge of their magic and their alchemy equivalent but do they understand stuff like, there is a top of the atmosphere, cradle revolves around the sun, space is empty, other planets exist... stuff like that

       

    Will Wight

    It's not great in Sacred Valley, but there are places in Cradle where their scientific understanding is pretty advanced.

    But their technology never advanced to the level you'd THINK it could, what with scripts and constructs.

    Why? A few reasons, but here's the main one: thanks to the sacred arts, if you have the resources, you can learn to DO pretty much anything yourself. You don't have to develop the technology to fly in a world where you can learn to fly.

    It's more complicated than that, but we'll explore it as we get into the more advanced areas of the world.

       
    Footnote: *Pre-Blackflame
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1370 Copy

    Andrew

    Okay, I'm a bit confused on how Cradle has that many people living on it. I know Will said that the planet is bigger and that vital aura helps to keep people alive, but I'm still not sure how it has such a huge population if there are so many dangerous conditions(monsters, remnants, kill-happy people, poisonous plants, etc.) and how there doesn't seem to be much large-scale agriculture(at least from what we've read). Is there agriculture that we haven't seen? Are they completely immune to disease? Is the planet just ridiculously huge(many times bigger than earth) to the point where that stuff could happen and still support a population of billions?

    Will Wight

     

    It has many times more surface area than Earth.

    Also, as B pointed out, we haven't seen any REALLY civilized places yet. We'll see a city in Blackflame, but even that will be a relatively small, isolated city.

    Thanks to vital aura and the power of madra, there are lots of inhabited places in Cradle that would be uninhabitable on Earth. For instance, there are cities on the bottom of the ocean. And on the surface of the ocean. And on the clouds.

     

    Daniel

    The inside of a volcano? The top of a rainbow? The back of a turtle? In a glacier? On a glacier? Under a desert? Suspended on a moon beam? Floating on sunlight? Deep under ground?

       

    Will Wight

    No moonbeams. And I would describe the city floating on sunlight as walking on sunshine, woah-oh-oh.

    Footnote: *Pre-Blackflame
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1371 Copy

    John

    I am curious. How far out do you outline? I am curious, because if the post about Lindon's wife being Jai's sister has any truth, that would imply you either outline a fair amount of the upcoming book, or that you were just able to conveniently make that work because you leave certain aspects vague enough to accommodate it.I am also curious how much world building you do before you start. You are able to answer questions that are fairly random with a high degree of specificity usually, so my assumption is a lot, but not sure if you just make it up on the fly and add that to your world aspect as you think through the answers.

     

    Will Wight

    That's a great question, John.

    I do both of those things. I always have a plan, but often I leave details vague just in case I have a better idea or change my mind later. Gives me some elbow room.

    I do a TON of world-building before I start, but a lot of it is fluid. When I'm writing the book, if what I planned doesn't serve the story as well as I imagined it would, I'll change the planned backstory as needed. Nothing is set in stone until it shows up in a book.

    As for parts that are more narrow than world-building elements--like characters, scenes, twists, etc.--most of those I design as needed when I'm working on the book. I don't determine their fate several books ahead of time.

    However, that's for MOST characters and scenes. There are a few incredibly specific elements that I've already determined way ahead of time, including several that are still four or five books away.

    TL;DR - Me setting up a specific character twist two books ahead is uncommon, but not terribly rare.

     
    Footnote: *Pre-Blackflame
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1372 Copy

    Numuhukumakiaki'aialunamor

    I have a few questions for you, Will.1) Would someone from the Abidan Court leave a remnant, can someone who uses the power of the Way even leave a remnant?2) If Lindon, Yerin and Eithan advance to the world beyond Cradle would they be babies in the new world or adults?3) Does any world beyond Cradle use Madras?

    Will Wight

    I can't believe you typed out that entire name. Now I want to hear you sing it.

    1.) Most of the seven Court members are not from Cradle, so no, they would not leave a Remnant. Any normal Abidan from Cradle would leave one, but it might not be capable of tapping into the Way. If it can't, then it's much less powerful than the Abidan was in life, and would be easily exterminated by anything capable of killing an Abidan.

    2.) Depends on where they go and when/how they advance. Lots of factors in play.3.) Not exactly. This is difficult to answer without getting into spoiler-y specifics.

    Numuhukumakiaki'aialunamor

    On the second answer.   Are the factors their age, power "level" during ascension, the world they are advancing to?   Or is it something completely else? Do they keep their memories, even if they become babies? This is so weird...    

    Will Wight

    As it turns out, I completely misunderstood your question.

    Suriel used the "infants/adults" terms metaphorically, so I didn't realize you were asking the question literally.

    They will be adults. They're going to physically transport themselves to another world, not reincarnate there.

       

    Footnote: Pre-Blackflame
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1373 Copy

    Daniel

    So if there is sword mandra that gathers on edged weapons does that mean there is club mandra that gathers around blunt objects?

    not a madra expert

    From what I can tell of the world and the usage of Madra in particular, I think the most analogous form of "blunt" madra would likely be named "force madra" or somesuch. Sword madra seems to have less to do with swords specifically and more to do with cutting or sharp edged implements. I'm reasonably certain (fact checking would be appreciated) that Jai Long has "sword madra" in his sacred path, yet he uses a bladed spear rather than a sword. As a side point, the name sword madra just sounds so much better then sharp madra or cutting madra that it makes sense to use it.

    Will Wight

    You've nailed it.

    Sword aura is really force aura gathered to a sharp edge, but what they call force aura is generally weaker and diffuse, so sword aura is brighter and easier to see.

    And I absolutely do call it "sword aura" because "cutting aura" or "sharp aura" sounds ridiculous.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1374 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
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1375 Copy

    Zeussaxis

    I doubt I can go 2 for 2...and this one required a Googling beforehand. I thought I recognized a name...

     

    "Naru" + dragons seems like there might be a reference here to Warcraft and the Naaru in Outland (and subsequent lore). Awfully wise and powerful beings, them...

    Will Wight

    No, no connection whatsoever.  

    Although I do sometimes take names from Warcraft and just change a letter, this isn't one of them.

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1376 Copy

    Nitin

     

    The dragon advances.The dragon destroys.The dragon consumes.

     

    Okay...

    So empire is run by bunch of cooks? No wonder Eithan is so happy about being a janitor.

     

    Will Wight

    Dragons don't make great cooks. Everything is pretty much either seared or blackened.

     
    Footnote: *Pre Blackflame Release
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1377 Copy

    Executive

    We talking fu manchu dragons or those pesky ones with wings and legs? It's important... for science

     

    Will Wight

    Chinese dragons, not Western dragons.

    All the excess energy that would go to their wings instead goes to their awesome beards.

     
    Footnote: *pre Blackflame release.
    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1378 Copy

    Nighgaler

    Ok so after rereading Elder Empire (since the finale is coming out) I decided to cave in and read my first xanxia (A will Eternal). So I read 10 chapters and holycrap I realized how much better Will's work is. Jesus, it doesn't even feel like I'm the main character nor does it feel like a story. Zero character development and zero world-building. I can't even picture the scenes that I'm reading properly! Someone please tell me it gets better. Its only saving grace is the fact that it is kinda funny. I guess maybe my expectations were just too high.

    P.S. I definitely took Will's work for granted

    Will Wight

    This is a long con just to make people appreciate my work more by contrast.

     

    ...to be serious, though, I love A Will Eternal. I think it’s a great example of the genre, and it incorporates parody organically without becoming an out-and-out comedy.

     

    Having said that, a few years ago I had a very hard time getting into Chinese web novels. A very hard time.

     

    I really enjoyed Japanese light novels, because they’re basically just anime on paper, and I was familiar enough with the basic tropes and with the source language that I could mentally fill in some of the gaps that were lost in translation and catch some of the cultural references and jokes.

     

    From there, I moved into Korean novels, which were similar but had a different cultural basis and some tropes that caught me off guard (why is the defining characteristic of so many Korean MCs their greed?), but by and large it wasn’t too much of a jump from Japanese light novels.

     

    When I tried to go from there into Chinese cultivation novels, I hit a brick wall.

     

    Why do these stories all have the EXACT same plot, with only the names changed? Why do they assume the reader already knows how the magic system works? Why do they use the same cliches over and over, and why do so many DIFFERENT authors use the same phrases? Why is the main character always the most handsome, smartest, AND most morally upright guy in every room, all the time, and his only mistakes are the ones that make the situation better? Why, when he butchers an entire enemy clan as revenge for the equivalent of taking his lunch money, do the survivors wail and blame their own hubris, rather than blaming the guy who just killed their family? Why do people swear eternal revenge on him for doing something perfectly understandable, like competing honorably in a competition? Why are women treated so poorly in so many of these series, even though the magic system has no distinction between female and male practitioners, so there should be no cultural hierarchy between genders in this world

     

    And that’s barely touching on the sentence-level writing, which was often straight-up difficult to read.

     

    I pushed through because I read some manga adaptations and liked them, and especially liked the concept of a whole world designed around a progression-based magic system.

    And in doing so, you know what? I learned to read completely past all that stuff I listed above and to enjoy the stories for the other things they brought to the table.

     

    It was a good lesson for me. I’m normally pretty picky, so it took some sheer discipline to push through at first. I thought I would just be tolerating these stories for the few elements I liked. But along the way, I realized I wasn’t just tolerating them, I was genuinely enjoying them. There’s a lot of value that wasn’t apparent to me at first, until I acclimated myself to the differences caused by language, culture, and medium (i.e. being published a chapter a day).

     

    Now, I have a much easier time reading translated web novels than most English self-published novels.

     

    Having gone through that whole journey, I wanted a story in the same genre that could skip over the hurdles, so that other people could enjoy stories similar to the ones I enjoy. A series written in English, for an audience with primarily Western sensibilities, and told with a more structured and organized plot rather than released as a daily serial.

     

    Thus, Cradle was born.

     

    Looking back, I’d have tweaked some things about Cradle’s basic formula in order to suit that purpose better, but long story short: the experience you describe is exactly why I wanted to write Cradle in the first place!

    September 2018 - December 2018 ()
    #1379 Copy

    Mexpedip

    Will, Has sales volume from r the audio book been as expected, better than expected r lower than expected? Just curious.

    Will Wight

    From the first book, about as expected. It pays for itself very quickly. Audiobook sales in general are much better than I initially expected.

    I fully predict that as the series comes out, the audiobooks will only perform better and better.

    government-owned

    any chance that future books will be available as audiobook on launch?

    Will Wight

    Maybe. Depends on a lot of factors, but that would require me to delay the book for at least a month after it was ready for release, so...

    Will's Life ()
    #1380 Copy

    Encouragement…hopefully.

    For some strange reason, I want to say ‘thank you’ to all the commenters who write encouraging messages. Discouragement does not help people to write…or to do anything, really.Thanks for your books, Will! They’re great!

    Will Wight

    Thanks! And fortunately, I get a lot more encouragement than discouragement from fans.