Fable III Interviews

In addition to a video interview with Peter Molyneux on The Engadget Show that may or may not interest you, there's a pretty good article-style interview with Fable III lead writer Mark Llabres Hill over at GameInformer. It's a different take on the usual, anyway:
Nonetheless, there are some mainstays of the Fable world that we'll definitely see again, but in a new light. Perhaps the most important returning idea is the heritage of characters from which the game's protagonist arises. (Probably the most important aspect to learn if you haven't played a Fable before is the idea of Heroes themselves,) Hill suggests. (Long ago there existed Guilds of Heroes, where powerful and magically gifted individuals would gather, unbound by morality. These people were a cross between knights, superheroes, wizards, and adventurers. Their powers were connected to an ancient bloodline and their symbol was the Guild Seal. Over time, these Heroes became more and more rare as the bloodline diluted, emerging sporadically, like a random mutated gene, if you want to think of it in those terms, until the Guild disappeared completely. By the start of Fable III, there are no Heroes left at all, and the Fable II Hero is considered to have been the last.)

In addition to a continued exploration of that vaunted heritage of heroes, there are also places within the world that may be familiar. One of the most important is a location that long time players should easily remember. (The city of Bowerstone is at the heart of Albion, and in many ways at the heart of the series. At the start of each game, we try plot a path through new regions and let players discover places on the map they've never seen before. It keeps the world fresh for both them and us,) Hill says. (But Bowerstone is part of Fable's identity, not just because it's the capital of the kingdom, but because it has such iconic landmarks: the town square with its clock tower, the bridge, the river, the lake on the outskirts. It has undergone two major changes since Fable II, though. The first is the process of industrialization, which has really transformed parts of the city, with its factories, smoke, and busy port. The second is Bowerstone castle, which was little more than a landscape feature last time around, but is now a key center of power.)