![]() “We wanted to make the Infinity Blade franchise more than ‘just’ an interactive experience,” said Mustard. MORE: America’s most hated device: The cable box Mustard said the proliferation of tablets and mobile devices has opened up the opportunity for fans to explore worlds in different ways on the same screen. While the traditional model of having a book turned into a movie and then a console game remains the norm (Sanderson’s own Mistborn book is being developed as a game), this type of collaboration between a bestselling author and a mobile game studio is unique. This type of collaboration is unique in the growing mobile games business. The second eBook, Infinity Blade: Redemption, which has received strong pre-orders, was released this Tuesday and has already hit the top spot on iBooks’ fantasy chart and is No. We brainstorm on all of this stuff, and we work together, but it’s been a blast to see how what I do for a book influences what they do for a game and then to be influenced by that to make the next book.” “At the end of Infinity Blade II they left the characters in this terrible situation, and I had to deal with that. “The characters that I added in the book became main characters for the game, and Chair extrapolated that and took things in a direction and tossed story back to me for the second book,” said Sanderson, who likened this cross-media creative experience to juggling chainsaws. Sanderson said his book took the game’s story in much different directions than the development team had originally envisioned, which allowed the game makers to explore more than just the addictive swiped-based tablet and mobile gameplay experience. That book gave fans a rich transmedia experience while Chair was at work on Infinity Blade II. The title has remained on the fantasy top-seller charts since releasing on Oct. The result was the bestselling eBook, Infinity Blade: Awakening, which debuted at No. MORE: Sega is refashioning itself as a PC game maker That gave me a lot of freedom to explore the world more deeply and actually make a cohesive setting out of it.” “It was exciting because the Infinity Blade game had all these hooks for a story, but the game itself did not have much of a story. “We got together and brainstormed, and the idea was that I would write a book that would be a sequel to the first Infinity Blade game,” said Sanderson, who lives in Salt Lake City not far from the game studio. Donald Mustard, a co-founder of Chair Entertainment, reached out to Sanderson early on through a mutual friend to ask the author if he’d like to collaborate on this franchise. ![]() This feat is especially noteworthy given that Chair Entertainment charges $6 for the game at a time when many mobile offerings are free-to-play. ![]() The first two mobile games in this action franchise, which blends elements of fantasy with science fiction, have sold over 11 million copies worldwide and generated more than $60 million in revenue.
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