5 Reasons Why Audiobook Usage Is Up Among Students

Nicholas C. Rossis's avatarNicholas C. Rossis

Frank Hamilton | From the blog of Nicholas C. Rossis, author of science fiction, the Pearseus epic fantasy series and children's booksI have been writing about audiobooks a lot lately, as audiobooks are a growing trend in publishing. Now, Frank Hamilton is pointing out another trend: audiobooks used by students. Interestingly enough, some of his reasons, such as accessibility, also apply to eBooks.

Frank is a blogger and translator from Manchester. He is a professional writing expert in such topics as blogging, digital marketing, and self-education. He also loves traveling and speaks Spanish, French, German and English.

I hope you find his guest post as interesting as I did!

5 Reasons Why Audiobook Usage Is Up Among Students

Audiobook | From the blog of Nicholas C. Rossis, author of science fiction, the Pearseus epic fantasy series and children's books

Every student’s fantasy is to read a textbook once and have it stick to their memory.

Technology may not have gotten there just yet. Nevertheless, more students are now exposed to tools such as audiobooks to help improve reading skills and comprehension.

Previously, audiobooks were more commonly used by persons with learning…

View original post 886 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

5 Reasons Why Audiobook Usage Is Up Among Students

Nicholas C. Rossis's avatarNicholas C. Rossis

Frank Hamilton | From the blog of Nicholas C. Rossis, author of science fiction, the Pearseus epic fantasy series and children's booksI have been writing about audiobooks a lot lately, as audiobooks are a growing trend in publishing. Now, Frank Hamilton is pointing out another trend: audiobooks used by students. Interestingly enough, some of his reasons, such as accessibility, also apply to eBooks.

Frank is a blogger and translator from Manchester. He is a professional writing expert in such topics as blogging, digital marketing, and self-education. He also loves traveling and speaks Spanish, French, German and English.

I hope you find his guest post as interesting as I did!

5 Reasons Why Audiobook Usage Is Up Among Students

Audiobook | From the blog of Nicholas C. Rossis, author of science fiction, the Pearseus epic fantasy series and children's books

Every student’s fantasy is to read a textbook once and have it stick to their memory.

Technology may not have gotten there just yet. Nevertheless, more students are now exposed to tools such as audiobooks to help improve reading skills and comprehension.

Previously, audiobooks were more commonly used by persons with learning…

View original post 886 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

The Challenge of Balancing a Large Cast

Avengers Cast

The biggest challenge with War of Nytefall is that I’m working with a really large cast of main and constant secondary characters.  Clyde may be the main one, but all of his friends and enemies make appearances in every book.  At least as long as they aren’t killed in the previous volume.  This means I have 15 characters to juggle PLUS any who are specific to the book.  It isn’t easy and has been a headache because I never know if I’m getting the balance right.  So, I’ve been depending a lot on these tricks:

  1. Some sedentary villains like what I did with Baron Kernaghan in Legends of Windemere.  Since the story follows the heroes, I limit the use of various villains depending on the story.  Xavier and Nadia are nobles, so they staying in Nyte makes a lot of sense.  They only take physical action when their agents aren’t able to get the job done.  Lou stays by Nadia’s side, which makes 3.  Archillious, Kai Stavros, Stephanie Talon, and Kenneth Decker are the more active ones.  They tend to move in a group or pairs too.  Kai and Stephanie are a spy and seer respectively, which also means they can be left behind or in the shadows without a problem.
  2. Splitting up the heroes and alternating chapters allows for multiple paths to be shown at the same time.  War of Nytefall is a little more globetrotting than my previous series, so the heroes have to go in opposite directions at times.  They have designated groups as well even if they mix it up at times.  The Vengeance Hounds tend to be sent to the more action/warrior paths while Chastity and Lost are the information gatherers.  Lost is also an honorary Vengeance Hound, so she might go with them while Chastity works with Mab and Clyde.  Those two go off on their own a lot as long as one hasn’t been kidnapped.  This allows for all of the characters to get moments to shine without the others being imagined sitting on the sidelines.  It still isn’t easy and some get less exciting bits than others.
  3. Accept that some heroes may have to be benched or limited for a volume.  This is one that I realized in War of Nytefall: Rivalry.  Gregorio is usually staying in his lair and getting a few scenes, but I was finding that others were getting similar treatment even when they were around.  Bob, Lost, Chastity, and Luther had very little to do since Titus was captured and the focus was really on Mab.  I used them to be around for when she was doing things and acting as a sounding board, but I don’t think any of those four had any massive solo scene.  This is in contrast to previous and this book where they all get a lot to do, but a long series means this happens at times.
  4. Conversations are a pain in the butt, but they’re necessary.  Unlike with the champions, I have a lot of strong personalities in the same room.  All of the Dawn Fangs are big on making their opinions known with the possible exception of Luther.  He tends to be calm and fine with listening.  Everyone else will jockey for attention in my head and it can have them yelling over each other.  When it comes to revealing information or posing questions through dialogue, I can’t just run along.  I need to stop and think of who would be most likely to say what I need them to say.  This results in a lot of ‘everyone gets a turn to speak at least once’ scenes with a little jumbling thrown in to avoid a dull pattern.  There’s always the 1-3 that get the lion’s share of the talking too while the others interject thoughts to move things along.

Those are the big tips, but it’s still a heavy juggling act here.  There are days when I feel like I made a mistake and didn’t pay enough attention to a character.  Other days I feel like I was all over the place.  I will say that having this be an 8 book series takes the edge off because it means I have time to give everyone a chance to shine.  Will I ever tackle a cast this big again?  I don’t know, but at least I’ve got experience in it.  That’s all we really can say about our paths as author.

So, what do you think about writing series with really large casts?

Don’t forget to check out War of Nytefall: Eradication on Amazon for $2.99!

Posted in War of Nytefall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Keys of Eden . . . The Basics

Pokemon

Probably not the best idea to use that picture, but people are going to jump to the comparison anyway.  Keys of Eden is the story/series where the main character is going to be collecting 100 unique monsters.  Wow.  It’s really trippy that the picture above looks like it keeps moving to the left.  Where was I?

Oh, yes.  This is the story where . . . I’m actually still toying with the overall plot.  The first idea was to have a prince going around a kingdom (putting it in the Cerascent Archipelago of Windemere) to gather the 100 royal spirits.  They were spread around the kingdom due to an accident and only the one who finds them all can claim the throne.  Maybe other princes will be on the hunt, but I’m leaning more towards him having been trained for this since youth.  Maybe his father being assassinated and the castle being destroyed is what caused the disaster and he was the only survivor.  He would be aided by a few friends and learn to use the creatures as summons to . . . do something?  I really don’t think a big climactic battle would work here unless I put a final threat that requires such power to defeat.  Maybe an evil dragon since I haven’t really used one of those in Windemere yet and there has to be one or two roaming around.

Anyway, another issue I have is that I’m not sure I want a prince alone.  Part of me considered having him with a female partner and both of them gather the spirits with each one gaining the favor of 50.  This could mean that each of the creatures has an opposite, so they’re always in pairs.  Do I have them be found in pairs or are those separated too?  Maybe it can differ?  This will be a bunch of short stories, so I don’t even know how many creatures should be found in each one.  100 stories could mean 5-10 books depending on how many I put in each volume.  I could switch it up with some found in groups, but will it get boring if I always have them gain a creature?  Once they miss one, it’s all over, but is that even possible?  I’m aiming more for kids here, so maybe the repetition is necessary when compared to an adult series.  I really don’t know.

Characters are another issue since I currently only have:

  1. A prince who seeks the 100 creatures.
  2. A female companion/betrothed who helps him.  Maybe have them raised together to skip the ‘get to meet you’ stuff.
  3. A third companion that may or may not be human, but will not be gaining spirits.
  4. Some kind of rival . . . villain . . . I need a group that they run into.
  5. Perhaps someone who wants to steal the prince or female companion from the other?
  6. Some recurring characters.

I’m also wondering if I should pilfer the Monster Maker posts for creatures.  Really not sure about this for two reasons.  First, I didn’t come up with the names and I don’t like the idea of suddenly using them when that wasn’t the original idea.  Second, they were never made with the intention of being used in a story.  So, they really don’t have a lot of what I need, which would be a unique power or significance.

Sudden idea:  What if the prince and female companion need to work together to gain the spirits who travel in pairs?  They can only gain them as a team.  Perhaps the big thing at the end is a 101st spirit, which is a solitary.  This could drop the short story amount to a minimum of 52 (1 opener, 1 finale, and 50 monster quests), but I still need to think of couple themes here.  I’ll run out of elements fairly quickly.  Maybe there’s a magical significance of 50 that I can find for help.  We’ll see.

How does all of this sound?

Posted in Character Origins | Tagged , , , , , , | 19 Comments

Goal Post: Total Overhaul for the Infamous GRE

I thought I didn’t get anywhere with the goals I made last week, but then I realized that I made them very vague.  War of Nytefall: Eradication was released and I’ve sold a whopping 2 copies.  Although, around 10 have told me they bought copies, so I don’t know what’s going on anymore.  Maybe I’m more successful than I realize, but Amazon doesn’t want me to know.  Whatever.  Right now, I’m so drained that I barely have the energy to write this up Friday night.  By the time it goes live, I might just getting out of one of the sources of exhaustion.  What could that be?  I need a list to keep my head straight.

THE GRE

For those who don’t know, this stands for the Graduate Record Examinations.  It is a 6-7 section test with 30 minutes for each one.  Two are essays, two are math, and two more are verbal with the last being a randomly chosen research one that doesn’t count.  You aren’t told what the last one will be, but it’s either a third math or verbal.  The questions are designed to confuse and trick the tester even though the information it looks for is middle and high school level.  Kind of like being asked what ‘2 + 2’ is, but in a foreign language that you have to decipher.  Verbal is even worse with obscure words being pulled out that you don’t see outside of the test, a crossword puzzle, or somebody trying to appear smart on an Internet forum.  In other words, this test is a beast and I need it to get into a Masters Degree program in the Fall.

I was studying for a few weeks and decided not to put off the test, so I signed up to do it this morning.  My son is with his mom, so I had the luxury.  Meant no writing Friday night and probably not later today when I’m destressing with Castlevania Season 2.  Fun part is that I was asked to show up even earlier because a lot of people signed up for the exam, so I get less sleep and easing into the day time.  Needless to say, I’m tense and the only sections I’m confident on are the essays, which look to be the same design as how I do blog posts.  Opener, 3-4 body paragraphs, and a closer coming in at around 500-600 words.  I’m already at 397 here.  Fingers crossed on this thing.

It’s Official!

Yeah . . . The divorce was finalized this week.  Some people who I told gave me congratulations.  Most asked how I felt and admitted that they didn’t know what to say because congrats seems insensitive.  Apologies isn’t much better for some because they know how sour things went in the last year.  There were other issues that added to me feeling the bittersweet taste of it all.  I’m single again and . . . what does that actually mean to me?  People tell me to start dating again, but I have no interest.  Focusing more on my job, books, and son.  Get all of that in order and I can do something about the loneliness that is still plaguing me.  Honestly, this really is a rough week to get hit by this since I have that test.

Writing

Nothing happened in this arena.  Didn’t even tackle the May blog posts because I was studying every night.  I thought about a few things.  Mostly ‘So, You Want to Be a Fantasy Author?’ (too arrogant a title?) and how to write the entries.  Really want to keep it casual with little to no jargon.  Each entry would be similar to blog posts, so part of me wondered if I should do a collection of ‘7 lists’.  Problem with that is it really limits how much I can talk about things.  Some subjects have a lot while others have a little.  Maybe I should just make them look like what I’m doing now.  Entry, 3-6 body paragraphs, and a closure.  It would be an essay collection for those that want basic info and tips about the overall genre.

The Future

Don’t have a plan for this week because I don’t know how the test will go.  Gotta hunt down two reference letters and figure out how to write a personal statement.  I can craft worlds from nothing and paint verbal pictures of heroes battling monsters and villains with ease.  Write about myself?  I don’t even know where to start because I find myself boring.  Saying ‘I want be teacher.  I need degree.  Let me earn degree.’ probably wouldn’t get me very far.  I went looking up examples of personal statements, but they’re all right out of high school and I haven’t been at that age in 21 years.  They don’t even ask questions like in the past.  Anyway, I’ll have to think about that once this other challenge is taken care of.

Goals of the week?

  1. Make it through GRE.
  2. Have lunch and eventually dinner.
  3. Laundry
  4. Put backings on more puzzles.  Only 30 more to go.
  5. Watch Castlevania Season 2.
  6. Have a celebratory drink . . . Not sure what I’ll be toasting.
  7. Return books to library.
  8. Go to bed because all of that is Saturday and I’m not thinking beyond that.
Posted in Goal Posts | Tagged , , , , , , | 24 Comments

Spend Your #Weekend with a #Vampire #Fantasy #Adventure! War of Nytefall: Eradication on Amazon!

Cover Art by Alison Hunt

Available on Amazon!

As Dawn Fang vampires are found dead across Windemere, their infamous leader will remember what it is to be afraid.

With the truce between Nyte and Nytefall nearing its end, an old enemy has emerged to rekindle the vampires’ most ancient feud. A Duragian priest is on the move and he is wielding a weapon that can depower and kill Dawn Fangs. This follower of the Sun God has claimed enough victims that Lord Tempest wants the weapon for himself and Clyde is beginning to worry that his fledgling kingdom is in danger of extinction. When it becomes clear that the mysterious relic and Clyde’s transformation into the first Dawn Fang are connected, he will be forced to face a past that he can barely remember.

What can Clyde do to defend his people, his life, and the child he does not know is on the way from the terrifying Fist of Durag?

Posted in War of Nytefall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Questions 3: Your Thoughts on Writing a Series

War of Nytefall: Eradication is the 4th book of this series.  Not much more of a lead in to that for this post.  Mostly because everyone has their own opinion on writing and reading the middle volumes of a series.  The first has all of the introductions of characters and world, so there’s a sense of all new there.  The finale has a sense of closure, so you go for the emotional beats to bring it to the end.  Between those volumes, you need to keep the series moving in a wave-like pattern with rises and falls that will carry the audience from one book to the other.  You need both closure and cliffhangers in order to make things work.  Not an easy task, but maybe we can help each other out.

  1. How do you tackle the middle of a series as either a writer and/or a reader?
  2. What is one ‘DO’ that you would give to someone writing a middle volume of a series?
  3. What is one ‘DO NOT’ that you give them?
Posted in Questions 3, War of Nytefall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 26 Comments

Immortal Wars: The Summoning Part 8 #fiction #throwback

(Previously on Immortal Wars.)

(Believe it or not, it took this long to get to the start of Chapter 2.  I had no sense of pacing back then.  My relationship with commas is tenuous at best.)

Disclaimer: Immortal Wars was the book I came up with and wrote in high school.  I hadn’t even hit college by the time I wrote the first two books.  That means I hadn’t developed my style yet, wasn’t good at self-editing, and the story was fairly basic. So, you’ve been warned that this is the ultimate author throwback segment for my blog and will show my author origins.  FYI-  I put the first book (The Summoning) through a Print-on-Demand publisher and the second one (Light, Blood, & Tears) never saw the light of day.  Enjoy!

In the farthest part of our solar system, a gigantic warship has come out of an invisibility field.  It is shaped like a thin bullet with several rectangular wings, windows, and fins covering the main body.  From a distance, the alien vessel looks almost defenseless.  But if a person was close enough to it, they would see the many lasers, missile launchers, and other weapons of total destruction that are hidden on the enormous vessel.  The warship silently orbits the planet Pluto and hides from the view of almost anyone by using an alien sensor deflection system.

Looking through one of the many dark-tinted windows is a woman whose face is covered by a black helmet shaped like a horned skull.  The helmet matches her dark armor, which has very long shoulder spikes of dull steel.  Thin and tangled strands of white hair are slipping out the back of her headgear and her eyes are an eerie bright orange.  The strange eyes give the woman an aura of mystery and pure dread.

“What are you looking at, Startrix?” asks a loud, high-pitched voice from somewhere behind her.  The armored figure slowly turns her head from side to side and sees nothing except the empty hallway.

“Why have you come to annoy me, Tegam?” asks Startrix.  Her voice sounds like gusts of wind blowing through dead leaves.

“I really hate the fact that I can never surprise you!  You and your stupid powers of seeing the future have always managed to ruin my fun.  Especially on April Fool’s Day!” yells the voice whose handsome owner appears out of nowhere.  The man’s name is Tegam and he prides himself at being a very talented and creative prankster.  His red, spiked hair and cunning blue eyes can easily be masked by his birthright ability to turn invisible.  Instead of wearing heavy metal armor like Startrix, Tegam wears a color changing jester costume that gives him a somewhat comical appearance.

“Your voice is very unique, Tegam.  It is very hard to hide something that is constantly out in the open.  Still, you may hate my powers, but they have saved our lives on many occasions,” replies Startrix as she looks out the window again.

“Your point is?  My birthright powers have done the same thing, but you don’t see me acting like a friggin antisocial bitch.  Why can’t you just enjoy the fact that we’re back home and are finally ready to cause some really big amounts of property damage?  And, it’s about damn time too.  We’ve been hiding in this Jtla warship and sneaking onto Earth like ghosts since the middle of 1980.  One could get cabin fever like this.”

“Are you forgetting about that immortal guardian named Solix?  Even though our scanners cannot get into the sun, I believe that he is still alive.  How do you plan to handle the final guardian?”

“I don’t know.  Maybe drop a heavy anvil on his balding head or stuff some lit dynamite down his ancient throat.  Something both funny and messy.”

“I think you have been watching too many of those childish cartoons.  You cannot even attempt to consider using all of the power that is at your disposal.  What about that magic whip that you took from those long dead guardians?”

“The what?  Oh!  The whip of matter.  Of course I would use it, gothic one.  I’m not as dumb as Hellax.  I’m also much cuter than him if I say so.  Anyway, how do you think I would be able to get the anvil or the dynamite?”

“I am very sorry that I asked.  If I were allowed to, I would have gladly tortured and slaughtered you long ago.  But, lucky for you, I am not in charge and do not have the necessary authority to do so.”

Without another word, Startrix walks off down the shadowy hallway and leaves Tegam to talk to himself.  The immortal prankster is actually used to being alone, even if he is in a really crowded room.  In fact, he likes being alone so much that he will annoy people until they have no choice but to leave.

“Stupid time bitch.  I could easily leave this moronic gang of criminals whenever I want to.  Not even the power of this Jtla warship can stop me.  I can turn it into a tiny Venutian Moth if I wanted to.  Of course, without me this group wouldn’t have any fun,” mumbles Tegam to no one in particular.

“Who are you talking to, Uncle Tegam?” asks the tiny voice of a young girl from the shadows behind him.

He turns around to look at an attractive teenage girl, with curious blue eyes, standing about three feet away from him.  Even though she is as slender as Tegam, she is slightly smaller than the redheaded jester.  Her shoulder-length blond hair falls down to cover her right eye and she slowly pushes it back with her hand.  She is the youngest of these evil immortals and perhaps the most naive.  In her smooth, ivory hands is a scythe that has a rough, gnarled handle.  Attached to the top of the handle is a blade that is pure black with a swirling white mist moving in it.  It is the planet guardians’ magic scythe, whose last two owners were ruthlessly killed.  The point is dangling a few inches from Tegam’s nose.

“Hello, Kilanus.  I didn’t hear you sneak up behind me.  Must be losing my touch.  Excuse me, but do you mind moving the death scythe’s blade out of my face?  It’s a lot more dangerous than you think.  Honestly, I don’t see why your mother allows you to carry that thing around like it was some children’s toy.  Thank you,” answers Tegam.

“Who were you talking to, Uncle Tegam?” repeats Kilanus.  The reason she calls Tegam her uncle is that she is the mysterious daughter of this sinister gang’s leader.  Everyone on the Jtla warship has been either her uncle or her aunt since she had awoken from a twelve-year coma.  Her long coma was caused by the very early appearance of her birthright powers.  When the traumatic event forced her mind to turn itself off, she mentally stayed at the age of a five-year-old.  Although Kilanus’ body grew into that of a healthy teenager, her mind was stuck in the phase of an innocent child.

“I was simply talking to myself.  It’s just a way for me to . . . relax,” replies Tegam with a friendly smile.

“I usually sleep or watch TV if I want to relax.  There’s this one show with people in it that have powers like us.  They go around and fight each other while helping other people.  It’s fun.  Have you seen Aunt Psylon and Uncle Draveon today?  They promised to show me what planet you all came from.”

“I think they’re still in their room.  Probably torturing something and having sex on the corpses.  Disgusting homicidal maniacs.  Wish they were either dead or neutered, but you didn’t hear that from me.  Wait a sec.  You don’t know what planet all of us are from?  Didn’t we already tell you about seventy-four times in the last week?  And I was told that my memory was terrible,” says Tegam with a smirk.

“Mommy did tell me.  But I just wanna see it with my own eyes.  Or at least a hologramic simulalition.  That is the word, right?  Well, I’ve gotta get going.  I’ll see you later, Uncle Tegam.  Bye.”

Kilanus cheerfully skips down the shadow filled hallway and nearly trips over her large blue cape.  The scythe clangs to the floor just a hair from her head.  Tegam is left alone again and wonders if the teenage child will ever start acting like her real self.

“I guess only time will tell.  Still, to be that young again would be great.  I could easily pull off a lot more pranks if I were smaller and faster.  But then again, I don’t even remember being that young.  It doesn’t really matter anyway.  My past will show itself eventually and right now I plan on enjoying now.  Especially the fun parts,” thinks Tegam.  With a puff of smoke he disappears and only his echoing footsteps on the metal floor are heard.

Posted in Immortal Wars | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

War of Nytefall: Eradication

coldhandboyack's avatarEntertaining Stories

Lisa Burton

Don’t touch that dial! You’ve landed on Lisa Burton Radio, the only show that brings you interviews with the characters you love. My special guest today is Chastity Sullivan, and Chastity is someone I respect. She’s an independent business woman who operates between factions that don’t always get along.

On top of all that, Chastity is a vampire. “Welcome to the show, Chastity.”

“Mab and Clyde told me all about their visits. So, I’m very excited to be here.”

“I think we all kind of know what a vampire is, but you’re something new. Can you give us an idea of what being a Dawn Fang means?”

“When people hear the word ‘vampire’, they are probably thinking of the Old World variety. Weak or killed by sunlight, an array of powers, and uncontrollable blood lust. Dawn Fangs are completely different. We’re actually alive with heartbeats, the ability to breed, eating…

View original post 1,684 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

7 Tips to Forging Magical Weapons: Freebie is That Singing Swords are Annoying

In War of Nytefall: Eradication, events are set in motion due to a mortal wielding an enchanted weapon.  The First of Durag appears to have the strength to eliminate Clyde.  It has already depowered and killed many Dawn Fangs, so all of the vampires are getting nervous.  I haven’t worked with a lot of enchanted weapons.  There was Timoran’s deflection axe, Decker’s elemental axe, Delvin’s shield, and a few other things, but I’ve kept it a lot more low key than I expected.  Kind of odd since I designed so many enchanted weapons in college.  I did learn a lot during that stage of my life, so here are some tips if you’re going to add magical gear to your story.

  1. For the love of all dice rolls, do NOT load every power into one weapon.  Nobody wants to see a hero with a sword the has healing, elemental magic, trap finding, dragon summoning, invisibility, teleportation, enhanced strength, constant charm, water breathing, perfect penmanship, soul stealing, etc. on it.  That’s ridiculous and any normal character would spend most of his or her time thumbing through the manual for the right power.
  2. Sometimes a small, simple power is enough for the character.  They might not be flashy, so their weapon will be more mundane in terms of magic.  Perhaps it’s only stronger than a regular one or it enhances eyesight.  You will be surprised how versatile these abilities would be too.  You’re forced to think outside of the box since you have limited your tools.  (Also, no 3 ton manual being dragged along by a team of yak required.)
  3. The amount and power of magical weapons is determined by the level of magic in the overall world.  If you have it that spellcasting isn’t a thing then you’re not going to see an enchanted tea kettle in every tavern.  There might be things left over from a previous era of high magic, but you need spellcasters to make new items.  Not to mention learning how to use them.
  4. Certain types of magical weapons require knowledge or, at the very least, SAFE experimentation.  A magical lance that stretches a mile long might require a special word, which the user can’t know just by picking it up.  Not unless you’ve established that enchanted items psychically tell people how to use them, but that sounds like cheating.  Constant effects like increased toughness or physical triggers like a jewel that you press on can be substituted for verbal cues.
  5. Things get more complicated with range weapons, especially if the enchantments go beyond increased range and accuracy.  If you use a regular arrow on a magical bow, does it make the arrow magical?  Do you even need ammunition or do all magic range weapons have the ability to conjure as soon as they are aimed?  What happens if you use a fire arrow on a freezing bow?  Draw and stabbing weapons are so much easier . . . Unless you have to wonder about enchantments on the scabbard.  Does a flame spell on the blade include the hilt?  Are these questions making things worse?
  6. Be careful designing a talking weapon.  There’s a reason you see these more in comedy than serious fantasy.  It’s too easy to turn them into a joke because they are ripe for being sassy and critical of the wielder.  If you still do it then you have to decide on if it has a personality or simply answers questions.  It could be nothing more than a verbal warning spell too.  Giving the weapon sentience requires treating it like any other character too.  It gets a personality and you need to have it act accordingly.  If it’s a jerk then it may start chatting away during a stealth mission.  Also, consider developing a way to ‘mute’ it like it can only talk outside of the scabbard or it has a mouth on the hilt that can be gagged.
  7. It shouldn’t be that easy to get these weapons unless you established that they are all over the place.  Being given it by family, friend, or mentor is one thing, but the story gets silly if that keeps happening.  There are only so many dungeons, thieves hideouts, dragon treasuries, and pirate islands with magical weapons that the heroes can run into.  By making them hard to get, you make them appear more special.  Now, if you do have it that magical weapons are as common as chamber pots then you better have it that every character is outfitted with something.  Go big or go back to bed on this one.
Posted in War of Nytefall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 33 Comments