Somewhere along the line, it happened. The name changed. George R.R. Martinâs celebrated fantasy series A Song of Ice and Fire more-or-less officially became known as Game of Thrones
We can probably blame HBO; their hugely successful TV series Game of Thrones is what launched Martinâs books into the public consciousness. Since the showâs debut, A Song of Ice and Fire has been relegated to status as a footnote during a credits sequence, or a small note on the box.
Now we have board games, card games, video games of every stripe, and all manner of memes, merchandise and miscellany, all under the Game of Thrones banner. But how did this happen, and why?
The first book in A Song of Ice and Fire, titled A Game of Thrones, was published sixteen years ago. Since then, Martin has published four more books, and each entry has won him more fans. But everything changed with the arrival of the 2010 HBO series. That show, of course, was called Game of Thrones. It wasnât called A Song of Ice and Fire: Game of Thrones; it wasnât even called A Game of Thrones like the book. Just Game of Thrones
Soon after that we got the announcement of several video games, the real-time strategy game Game of Thrones: Genesis and the upcoming Game of Thrones RPG based on the property. Weâve also got a Game of Thrones card game, as well as the hugely complex and diabolically fun Game of Thrones board game. That the board game in fact concerns characters introduced in the first three books doesnât matter; Game of Thrones is no longer a book; itâs a brand.
https://lastchance.cc/winter-is-coming-in-these-game-of-thrones-genesis-scre-5832024%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Countless memes, blogs, licensed products, and fan-art collections go under the Game of Thrones title. Even the awesomely-titled Blog of Ice and Fire has added a sub-header including both titles.
I think that the new title is an improvement. For a while, I wasnât so sure; back when I was pondering what a great Game of Thrones game would look like, I even said that I thought that the game should be âproperlyâ titled A Song of Ice and Fire. Iâve changed my mind. People have latched onto Game of Thrones because it really is a better name for the series. Here are some reasons why:
Itâs cooler-sounding. Nothing is as much of a turn-off as a wordy, overcooked fantasy name. A Song of Ice and Fire sounds like it could be any clichĂ©d fantasy book; it conjures images of the sorts of tales that those who arenât already fans of high fantasy generally avoid. Game of Thrones is much easier to say. Removing the âAâ was also a good call: the unnecessary article adds a surprisingly intense layer of self-serious dorkiness.
Itâs evocative. âGame of Thrones.â What does that mean? It calls to mind all sorts of interesting imageryâthrone-shaped chess pieces moving about a board, kings fighting for control of a kingdom. Which of course is entirely true to the story at the heart of these books, becauseâŠ
Itâs accurate. Sure, it could be said that Martinâs books are about ice and fire. Theyâre about dragons and the snow, the ice-covered great wall and the sands of Dorne. But thatâs not what theyâre really aboutâtheyâre really about a bunch of people conniving and manipulating one another in a bloodthirsty quest for power. While the first book may be called A Game of Thrones, the game itself plays out over all of the books, or at least, the first five. The overarching story is about a Game of Thrones.
Itâs part of one of the seriesâ most famous quotes. âIn the Game of Thrones, you win or you die.â Itâs one of the most recognizable quotes from the whole series (perhaps behind âwinter is comingâ), and also the truestâthatâs whatâs really going on here. A fight to the death for power. Musical albums often have what I call the âMoney Line,â where the artist sings the hidden lyric that contains the name of the album. (e.g. âUnder the Table and Dreamingâ or âChutes Too Narrow.â) This quote is the equivalent of thatâthe line encapsulates the series and contains its title.
This isnât the first time this has happened with an overcooked fantasy title. People like to simplify things, and weâve done it plenty of times in the past. Knights of the Old Republic became âKotOR,â World of Warcraft became âWoW.â As we watched the ongoing and just-resolved legal battle between Mojang and Zenimax over the term âScrolls,â who among us didnât say âWell, why do they even care? No one calls Elder Scrolls games The Elder Scrolls anyway.â
https://lastchance.cc/bethesda-settles-lawsuit-with-mojang-whose-next-game-c-5892179%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
The lovely iPad game Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP was my favorite game of last year, but that doesnât mean I loved the title. It was purposefully ungainly, but it was a joke that lost its luster after the fifth or sixth time I had to type it. Fortunately, the guys who made it left that one word, the misspelled âSworcery,â able to stand in for the whole title.
https://lastchance.cc/the-actual-best-game-music-of-2011-superbrothers-sw-5871943%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Game of Thrones implies a much more interesting story than A Song of Ice and Fire
Itâs never easy to name things. Everyone whoâs ever named a band or a website can tell youâyou sit forever, poking holes in your ideas, trying to imagine how this name will work in the real world, how it will sound five years from now. One of the things that often comes up when naming something is how people will shorten it.
The question is: Will this new title always be appropriate to the series? Sure, Game of Thrones encapsulates the first five books better than A Song of Ice and Fire. But will that always be the case? Without spoiling too much, I could easily imagine that at some point, these stories stop concerning themselves with kingdoms and lineage and start concerning themselves with a broader, more traditionally epic battle for survival. Or not. No one but George R.R. Martin knows what will happen in the final two books. Or, as it has been fretted, maybe he doesnât even know.
I think Game of Thrones implies a much more interesting story than A Song of Ice and Fire. The first one sounds like an intense story of political intrigue, the second one sounds like tired high fantasy. Whether the adopted title will always be accurate is something weâll only know once the final two books, The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring are published.
For now, the merchandising machine is fully underway, and itâs too late to turn back. The TV showâs possibly great, possibly disappointing second season will be out in a matter of weeks, and Iâm sure that a plethora of Game of Thrones-branded toys, clothing, games, and other tie-ins will follow.
https://gizmodo.com/can-game-of-thrones-season-two-live-up-to-season-one-5891455
The title of a seriesâ first entry has somehow usurped the title of the series itself. The age of A Song of Ice and Fire has ended. Now is the time of Game of Thrones