| | | Advertisement |  | | | |  | GameBanshee Forums
| | 
04-05-2008, 09:34 AM
|  | News ID | | Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 25,275
| | BioWare Interview CVG has a somewhat slobberingly fanboyish but expansive interview with writers Mike Laidlaw and Drew Karpyshyn about what makes BioWare successful. Creating entertaining, involving dialogue for characters is a major element of making a role-playing game, with characters such as KOTOR's killer robot HK-47 and his immortal line, "I am most eager to engage in some unadulterated violence." However, when asked about writing speech for games, Karpyshyn is brutally honest in his assertion that "dialogue is so often one of the last things we do!
"There's so much you have to do before starting on the dialogue, especially with a new game like Jade Empire, as you have to establish the world. So for Mass Effect we spent about nine months planning everything out before we started to lock down characters or the story. It's trying to establish what's your setting, what's the tone, your art style, and your narrative style."
Laidlaw adds that it's important that writers also ensure they ask themselves what the game is actually about: "You have to think what are we trying to do? What are we trying to say? What is the point of this story? If you think about Mass Effect, a prime theme of the game is 'Is it us versus them, or is it us with them?', which could very easily be carried into an allegory for modern times. It helps us set a purpose for the story and the characters."
BioWare create character bibles for most of the personalities in their games, and settle on three levels of importance - major, medium and minor. "Minor characters are typically the barkeep, where I'm not so worried about his family history, as in any interesting personality quirks he has - he's short and round, maybe has asthma..." says Laidlaw. | 
04-05-2008, 10:01 AM
| | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: U.S.
Posts: 1,188
| | | Does Bioware even do interviews with non-fanboys, anymore? *sigh* But as this article (and the last fifty I've read on Bioware) have emphasized, Bioware makes the story and characters it's primary focus. I've enjoyed that approach, personally. But, I know others would prefer less linear modes of storytelling from Bioware. | 
04-05-2008, 10:47 AM
|  | GameBanshee Editor | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Liberty City, the Netherlands
Posts: 821
| | | I don't mind that approach either. But I don't think BioWare is king at it. Their stories are good, but not brilliant, and they often lose sight of the interactive nature of the medium (from what I've seen of Mass Effect, but I might be wrong) | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Rate This Thread | Linear Mode | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is On | | | | |