#1 Reviews: The Fanfiction-ing
Posted: Thu Oct 09, 2014 9:17 pm
(To mods: if there's a more appropriate forum for this post/thread, please feel free to move it with my blessings. My thanks in advance.)
A highly wordy and unnecessary intro title
So. We currently have Havoc's music reviews, Havoc's movie reviews, Frigid's book reviews, and Hotfoot's game reviews. While I don't have anything so high-minded as any of those things, I figured I'd throw out this review thread for people who like reading good fiction concerning a currently-established universe. In other words, fanfic.
I've collected a number of links to works over the years, but I'll only post reviews of the ones that made an impact on me in some way that was memorable. Don't worry, I'm not going to MST3K here, because I'm only going to review stuff I think is good enough to recommend to someone. Your mileage may vary of course, but I would welcome discussion here about them.
For them to appear in this list though, the work has to make me think, and in the really good cases, to wonder "what if." In the best cases, I won't have to wonder.
[hr]
Title: Mass Effect: Kye Shepard's Story
Universe: Mass Effect (covers events of all three games)
Link: http://archiveofourown.org/series/4060
Score: 9
This review will cover all stories in this series: Iunctio, Iunctio: Wrex, Onus, Domus, Xun, Exitus, Resono, and Certus. The events covered in the stories cover all the effects of the games, focusing less on what was covered directly by the games, and instead expanding on "off-screen" moments at the beginning, though slowly grows to add additional details of the games later on - both with equally impressive results.
Onus, Domus, Xun, and Resono cover time between games, filling in additional events and history with characters, and all of them are done quite well. Shepard's old SpecOps CO is introduced, and some other interesting conjectures happen about just how deep Cerberus' fingers run within the Alliance.
This series sets out to be a character study of the characters in the games, trying to get more into their heads, and into the worlds in which they live, and with that, it succeeds admirably. The culmination of the series, Certus, is the work I am very tempted to recommend on it's own, as the author manages to slightly tweak the timeline and events of ME3 in such a way that it truly feels satisfying when you get to the end.
When you're novelizing the events of a game, the temptation can be strong to "tweak" certain things to make things easier for the hero, whether in small ways or large. In this series though, the author recognizes that some of the very best stories are borne of conflict and hardship, and even adds additional things that unlike the games, become very personal for Shepard. This culminates viscerally in Certus, and the author makes sure to weave a strong undercurrent of fighting against hopelessness and fear in the face of certain annihilation, something I didn't quite feel the games got across very well story-wise. It also ends with a properly satisfactory ending, one that in my mind makes much more sense than ME3 did. The events at the end of ME3 weren't changed, per se, but they are expanded upon in a way that makes them even more imposing, while also making an awful amount of sense.
Most chapters of each story focus on one character as the main perspective, seeing things from their view, which helps one to better understand and identify with that character. This is done impressively from the start, and only gets more impressively done as the series progresses.
You don't have to necessarily read the other stories before jumping right into Certus, but they're good enough that I recommend you go from the beginning.
My final score for this fan-fiction series of stories is collectively a 9. I would (and am) recommend them to a friend in search of reading a good story.
A highly wordy and unnecessary intro title
So. We currently have Havoc's music reviews, Havoc's movie reviews, Frigid's book reviews, and Hotfoot's game reviews. While I don't have anything so high-minded as any of those things, I figured I'd throw out this review thread for people who like reading good fiction concerning a currently-established universe. In other words, fanfic.
I've collected a number of links to works over the years, but I'll only post reviews of the ones that made an impact on me in some way that was memorable. Don't worry, I'm not going to MST3K here, because I'm only going to review stuff I think is good enough to recommend to someone. Your mileage may vary of course, but I would welcome discussion here about them.
For them to appear in this list though, the work has to make me think, and in the really good cases, to wonder "what if." In the best cases, I won't have to wonder.
[hr]
Title: Mass Effect: Kye Shepard's Story
Universe: Mass Effect (covers events of all three games)
Link: http://archiveofourown.org/series/4060
Score: 9
This review will cover all stories in this series: Iunctio, Iunctio: Wrex, Onus, Domus, Xun, Exitus, Resono, and Certus. The events covered in the stories cover all the effects of the games, focusing less on what was covered directly by the games, and instead expanding on "off-screen" moments at the beginning, though slowly grows to add additional details of the games later on - both with equally impressive results.
Onus, Domus, Xun, and Resono cover time between games, filling in additional events and history with characters, and all of them are done quite well. Shepard's old SpecOps CO is introduced, and some other interesting conjectures happen about just how deep Cerberus' fingers run within the Alliance.
This series sets out to be a character study of the characters in the games, trying to get more into their heads, and into the worlds in which they live, and with that, it succeeds admirably. The culmination of the series, Certus, is the work I am very tempted to recommend on it's own, as the author manages to slightly tweak the timeline and events of ME3 in such a way that it truly feels satisfying when you get to the end.
When you're novelizing the events of a game, the temptation can be strong to "tweak" certain things to make things easier for the hero, whether in small ways or large. In this series though, the author recognizes that some of the very best stories are borne of conflict and hardship, and even adds additional things that unlike the games, become very personal for Shepard. This culminates viscerally in Certus, and the author makes sure to weave a strong undercurrent of fighting against hopelessness and fear in the face of certain annihilation, something I didn't quite feel the games got across very well story-wise. It also ends with a properly satisfactory ending, one that in my mind makes much more sense than ME3 did. The events at the end of ME3 weren't changed, per se, but they are expanded upon in a way that makes them even more imposing, while also making an awful amount of sense.
Most chapters of each story focus on one character as the main perspective, seeing things from their view, which helps one to better understand and identify with that character. This is done impressively from the start, and only gets more impressively done as the series progresses.
You don't have to necessarily read the other stories before jumping right into Certus, but they're good enough that I recommend you go from the beginning.
My final score for this fan-fiction series of stories is collectively a 9. I would (and am) recommend them to a friend in search of reading a good story.