Yesterday, I posted some screens from Cyanide Studioâs upcoming PC strategy game A Game of Thrones: Genesis (one of those screens is above). Details about the game are few and far between, and the only video online is a gameplay-free teaser. At a casual glance, the game seemed cool enoughâa Total War-style strategy game set in Westeros. Sounds neat!
https://lastchance.cc/winter-is-coming-in-these-game-of-thrones-genesis-scre-5832024%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Iâm a little more than halfway through A Feast For Crows right now (and although itâs no Storm of Swords, Iâm warming to it). And of course, Iâve been thinking about what kind of game it could be since well before Iâd even heard of Genesis. So, here are some thoughts. Fair warning, thereâll be spoilers throughout, if youâve yet to read the books.
For starters, letâs just go ahead and name this game for A Song of Ice and Fire from here on out, yeah? Bad enough that the TV series (which I totally love) is named after the first bookâa bit like calling the Lord of the Rings movies The Fellowship of the Ring
Politics are such a huge part of these stories, and so a game based on A Song of Ice and Fire would have to involve political machinations.
Iâve been neck-deep in Westeros for the past several months, and if I had to imagine a game that captured the spirit of George R.R. Martinâs stories, it probably wouldnât even involve that much combat. The battles in A Song of Ice and Fire feel almost entirely secondary, and ditto for the TV show. In the showâs first season, most of the big battles occurred offscreenâbut I actually liked that. âThe action isnât the point,â the show seemed to be saying. And really, it isnât.
Politics are such a huge part of these stories, and so a game based on A Song of Ice and Fire would have to involve political machinations. But itâd have to be more than just dry, Civilizationesque political debate and conflictâthe politics of A Song of Ice and Fire are sordid and personal, generations-old familial grudges laced with dark, bloody betrayal. Similarly, many characters wind up doing their best with a crummy handâHere in book 4, I even find myself feeling sorry for poor, increasingly psychotic Cercei, as she attempts to deal with an unraveling kingdom and her increasingly tenuous grasp on the Iron Throne. A complicated, difficult-to-win sim like Fate of the World could actually be kind of appropriate.
But letâs back up and talk about betrayal for a second. One of the running themes of the books seems to be that no matter how someone thinks somethingâs going to go down (or how they feel it âshouldâ go down), it almost always goes down differently. If I had to name a single overarching theme of these books, Iâd probably quote the Stones: âYou canât always get what you want.â
Fairness simply doesnât exist in Westeros. âI was promised a golden crown!â âI had the dying king sign this paper!â âWeâre sparing him and sending him to the wall!â âWe took you in and raised you like one of us!â âWeâll have a wedding and everything will be fine!â Etc., etc., etc. And so in order for a game to feel right in this world, itâll have to involve a whole lot of things going wrong.
So: Politics, Betrayal. Got it. And then thereâs the White Walkers. Lingering at the fringes, this dark, mysterious menace. Hmm⊠I guess we really did already kind of get A Song of Ice and Fire: The Video Game, didnât we? It was made by BioWare, and they called it Dragon Age: Origins
https://lastchance.cc/dragon-age-origins-review-tripping-the-blight-fantast-5395135%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
(Side note: âOriginsâ and âGenesisâ are basically the same word, which is interesting.)
But then, Dragon Age: Origins still wasnât quite a proper Song of Ice and Fire game, despite drawing clear inspiration from the books. And in truth, Martinâs world is so rich, so storied, that it would be almost impossible to include everything in any single game. Perhaps an adventure set during the much-fabled Age of Heroes? An action-RPG following the exploits of Brienne of Tarth and Podrick Payne? Castle management in the Red Keep? A tower-defense game set on The Wall?
I suppose Cyanideâs real problem is that there are so many great ways to approach a Song of Ice and Fire game that their decision to make a fantasy strategy game feels a little uninspired. But then again, who knows? Iâve reached out to try to learn more, and for all we know they could very well be working a lot of great things into the finished product. Or hey, maybe someone will just go and make one like the glorious 16-bit version they posted at College Humor.
https://lastchance.cc/watch-game-of-thrones-in-magnificent-16-bit-5827915%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
You can contact Kirk Hamilton, the author of this post, at [email protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.