Zunu wrote:Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Celedam wrote:Anyhow, next up for me is Sword Art Online, before it too expires off of Netflix.
I'm interested in what you end up thinking of SAO. It's one of the shows that I've been teetering back and forth on watching for a while now.
I watched SAO, and I guess it succeeded in being a Big Deal, like D&D meets Ready Player One, but at the same time it felt like the rump to a merchandizing tie-in, which I don't know is even true, but that's how it felt.
Yeah, I'm only a few episodes into it, but I'm getting the same feeling.
Going back even further than
Ready Player One, the
Otherland series by
Tad Williams covered much of the same ground, in much greater detail, about twenty years ago. So
none of this is really new to me.
Continuing this tangent (because for the first time in weeks I'm not crunching to finish something before my daily
stand-up meeting), I read the
Otherland series as it was published because I had previously read and enjoyed Williams'
Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series. I don't know if would pick up either series today, however, because Williams is the sort of author who thinks "epic" simply means "long".
No, seriously…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tad_Williams#Big,_complex_storiesI ain't got time for that now. It's bad enough with George R. R. Martin and Neal Stephenson, and they're better writers overall. And I swear I found that link
after I made the statement; I checked Williams' page just to see if he is still active today, and there it was. So it's not just me who thinks that.
(for any language nerds out there: yes, i am making a distinction between "author" and "writer". in my mind, "author" is a profession while "writer" is someone who practices the skill of writing. i am a writer — specifically, a business and technical writer — but i am not an author. to explain further would require a separate post, and i doubt anyone is really interested. i've blathered enough already.)