In the spirit of celebrating things that spark joy and build community^, @interact-if will be running a mini-series āWriting Spotlightā, which will feature beloved IFs in 5 main categories:
Best story/narrative (Epic/Exciting)
Best story/narrative (Cozy/contemplative)
Best world/setting
Best character
Most memorable choice/branch
How this works
Under each of these categories, vote for an IF (can be completed/WIP), either by: leaving a comment on this post, sending in an ask, or filling out this form.*
*Do include at least a sentence on why youāre voting for that IF / things you loved that made you vote for it). These lines will be compiled and Iām sure theyāll bring a little ray of sunshine to these authors.
If youāre leaving a comment or ask, do clearly state which category youāre casting a vote for (you can vote in multiple categories, but try to stick to 1-2 IFs in each category if possible)!
Do refrain from voting twice in the same category please, this is done in good fun :)
After voting closes
Do send in your by 27 April, and I will be tallying the votes and reaching out to winning authors** in each category to do a small interview feature, in the hopes of uncovering some tips/tricks/advice on their techniques and writing process (especially in relation to their strengths e.g. world-building, character arcs etc.)
**I might have to see how this works out, some authors are a little more difficult to contact, but Iāll try.
Again, I hope this will generate some positivity and love, plus maybe uncover some of the behind-the-scenes techniques/process behind the wonderful IFs that we love and talk about a lot! <3
^Especially in this turbulent time of Trump fuckeryā¦
Last but not least, if youād like to see any other categories featured in the next iteration, or if you have ideas for specific questions to include in the interviews with these authors, feel free to drop a message or a comment!
Looking forward to the responses, and hopefully this will be fun for everyone! :)
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Itās time for the next in our new author features series! Today, Paulina Ulrich, author of Chosen and Flightless Bird is here to answer a few questions! Take it away Paulina
1. Tell me a little bit about your books!
Paulina: I currently have 2 different series out. The Flightless Bird series is a YA time travel romance set in the Pacific Northwest. It's about a girl named Livy who struggles through her parent's divorce and meets a brother and sister who share a world of secrets and adventure with her. The books are as ordered: Flightless Bird, Broken Wings, Fair Feathered, and Timeless Sky. I have another series that has been award nominated called the Fighting Fate series and this series has 2 books in it so far: CHOSEN and CHANCES. This series is a mature YA (swear word alert) series that is part urban fantasy/paranormal and is based on Nordic legends. The main character Kaddy (pronounced caddy, like a golf caddy) is the drummer in her band and she has dreams of getting out her small town with her friends until she uncovers her ancestry and suddenly, she has a lot bigger problems! It's hard to describe both series in a nutshell but I hope that did it.
2. What books/movies/TV shows would you compare your books to?
Paulina: Honestly, I'm not sure what books/movies/TV shows my books can be compared to! I don't watch much TV or many movies myself so this one is hard to answer. Comparing to other books, CHOSEN and CHANCES have angel-type creatures in them, so may be similar to angel type books?
3. What are some of your favorite authors/books?
Paulina: Another hard question! I enjoy so many different books but a few of my favorites are the Hunger Games trilogy, Rainbow Rowell, the Nancy Drew series (childhood favorite!), Harry Potter of course, and I'll occasionally read some nonfiction.
4. What are your inspirations?
Paulina: I find a lot of inspiration through music since I love listening to music and I play three instruments! Nature is also a huge source of inspiration. Going on walks or hiking and being in the forest really gets my creative juices flowing as I listen to the birds or a nearby stream. Fresh air is great for clearing my head to focus back on my writing.
5. What comes next for you, writing wise?
Paulina: What's next is finally wrapping up the last book in the Flightless Bird series, Timeless Sky and right after that my focus will be finishing CHOICES, book 3 in the Fighting Fate series!
6. Anything else you want to share?
Paulina: The last thing I'd share I thought would be a fun fact about me. I know I'm in the minority on this but, I don't actually like chocolate!
To kickstart the Black History Month Author Spotlight series, I'd like to introduce everyone to our first IF author, Lapin (@harlequinoccult)!
(I had a ton of fun reading Lapinās answers, and Iām sure you will too! Read on for a celebration of āweird,ā Lapinās Black southern gothic / horror influences, and how a D&D game could lead to interactive fiction!
Lapin, thank you again for your candid, humorous responses, I am very honored to have gotten to know you better :D)
Author: Lapin
Black creole and cajun, artist and writer, and wannabe game developer
Games: Slaughter Squad (Horror, Slasher, Romance)
Synopsis:
YOU HAVE A HUNGER
A HUNGER THAT YOUāVE BEEN NEGLECTING
For the most part, youāre a pretty normal mid-20-something year old who lives in a shitty apartment in the city. Well, except for one thing.
Your.....āAssociateā Carter āDollfaceā Abernathy.
Who is a murderer, and quite frankly, a sloppy one at that. And youāre the accessory to his crimes. No matter what way youāve gotten to know the man, or how you feel about him, youāre stuck with him, and stuck with just being his little āhelperā
........Or are you? Especially when youāre suddenly given a....Unique opportunity.
Games: The Valley of Luck (Fantasy, Adventure, Romance)
Synopsis:
The Valley of Luck was said to be a myth. Something that grandparents would tell their grand-kids around a campfire. Even those who worshiped Lucian, The God of Luck, thought it nothing but an old wives tale.
Until, one day, a man with an arm made of solid gold started telling people that he'd been there, that he'd seen the Valley. Word spread quickly, and suddenly, every continent was alight with the rumor that The Valley was real, that it could give you all the riches you could ever want, and then some. However, your quest, whether related to The Valley or not, will lead you down a much stranger path.
Quote from the interview:
My upbringing was a bit odd. I am the youngest of three, two older brothers, one being a half brother, in a black military household⦠Middle school Lapin was a jock. But, lo and behold, the internet started getting more popular and that kid's brain exploded from internet exposure, for better and for worse.
⦠I feel that there is a specific and niche demographic of people like me that were raised by early 2000s to 2010s internet. And on that era of internet, were creepypastas, online horror, early ARGsā¦.I ADORED internet horror, which was my gateway into classic horror, funnily enough.
Slaughter Squad, in my eyes, is a letter to that black kid that wanted to be weird. Be weird, be messy, see a fucked up movie, get more out of life.
Read on for the full interview!
Tell me more about yourself! What are some things new readers or long-time readers might not know about you?
Both parts of my family are 100% from Louisiana, New Orleans and the deep south. My moms side have been there so long, we have two streets named after us.
Can you tell me a bit about what youāre working on right now and your journey into interactive fiction? What inspired the game/story youāre currently writing?
My main project, of course, is Slaughter Squad. I love slasher movies and horror media in general. But what I always noticed with horror/romance, at least in the visual novel scene, is that the main character is nearly always the one getting screwed over, so I thought, well, what if the bad guys actually are your peers? How would this dynamic change if they don't see you as prey? I never thought that premise would appeal so much to so many but hey, I can't complain! I adore seeing people having fun with the silly little concept I had.
Now, my secondary project, The Valley of Luck. Some may not know this, but this story is based off of a D&D campaign I DM'ed back in the day with my friends. All the ROs are NPCs that my friends had, or where going to encounter. I won't lie, I did shy away from it and changed some things when the whole debacle with Wizards of the coast (the company that "owns" D&D) Where making some...questionable decisions. But this story is my baby. My first born. This one has been in the works far longer than SLSQ and has a lot of background lore that I hope I get the opportunity to share.
I do have a few other projects bumping around, One I am particularly excited for, But that one will have to wait a little bit~
How has your identity, heritage/background, upbringing, or personal experiences influenced your storytelling or writing process? OR How does your work feature aspects of your identity / experience?
My upbringing was a bit odd. I am the youngest of three, two older brothers, one being a half brother, in a black military household. I never felt that I truly had a sense of identity until that household inevitably split up. Everyone talks about being the weird kid in middle school, but no one mentions being the "normal on the outside but wants to be the weird kid so bad its painful on the inside but can't because you were told that stuff is 'white people shit' " type of kid.
Middle school Lapin was a jock. But, lo and behold, the internet started getting more popular and that kid's brain exploded from internet exposure, for better and for worse. I was a little shitter on the internet, I can't lie about that, as much as I want to. But I feel that there is a specific and niche demographic of people like me that were raised by early 2000s to 2010s internet. And on that era of internet, were creepypastas, online horror, early ARGs....I ADORED internet horror, which was my gateway into classic horror, funnily enough. Slaughter Squad, in my eyes, is a letter to that black kid that wanted to be weird. Be weird, be messy, see a fucked up movie, get more out of life.
What does your writing process look like? Any rituals or habits? Any tips, tricks, philosophies or approaches that have worked very well for you?
Let your characters speak through you like you're being possessed by a demon.
Whatās the one thing youāre really proud of that youāve written so far? Do you have a favorite character or scene that youāve written?
I am so serious.
is it wildly inconvenient? yes. does it help your writing a ton? also yes. Doing Roleplay with friends is a fantastic way to learn to do this. being a DM for a D&D game has basically made it so characters can simply speak from my brain at any given moment. It's also annoying because some of these people do NOT shut up. Learning how a character would react on the fly does wonders for dialogue writing and character analysis. Roleplay with your friends, or hell, strangers who are down to clown that could become friends. Be cringe. be free.
I love the opening to Slaughter Squad and if you told me to rewrite it with a gun to my head I would tell you to shoot me. I love how punchy it is and it came out exactly how I wanted it to. I don't play favorites with characters (<- lying) but my two favorites to write are the stinky little bastard cat Sterling in TVoL and.....Carter, from SLSQ. I love writing complete bastards. One being lighthearted and gets a pass for it because he's just a kitty cat and the other you want to actively beat his face in with your bare hands. It's SO funny.
If you were to say one thing to your readers, other authors, and/or the interactive fiction community: what would it be?
Write. Write it now. Doesn't have to be good doesn't have to be polish all that matters is that you WROTE IT. All the bells and whistles can come later!!!! Stop thinking about the later and think about the now!!!! Write what you love and never give two shits about if it's cringe!!! Be excellent to each other!!!
Any books, music, movies etc. youāre obsessed with at the moment, or which changed your life (or perspectives on something)?
GO LISTEN TO CHROMAKOPIA BY TYLER THE CREATOR RIGHT NOW!!!!!!!!!
This-or-that segment: (bold = Lapinās pick)
Coffee or tea?
Early mornings or late nights?
City or countryside?
Angsty or Cozy romances? (Or enemies-to-lovers or best-friends-to-lovers?)Ā Ā
Steady progress or frenzied binge-writing followed by periods of calm?
Summer or Winter?
First drafts or editing?
Introvert or extrovert?
Plotter or pantser?
Characters or plot first?
Lapinās custom āthis-or-thatā pairing: Rain or Shine
More on Black Southern Gothic:
Black southern gothic can vary a lot, but when I think of it, I think of old semi abandoned wood shotgun houses in the swamp, all white tiny baptist churches where the white paint is peeling from the heat and humidity, riding horses down a dirt paved street while people still ride by in their old busted down 1960s chevys. Old plantation houses that have been reclaimed by the swamp. The dark, humid heat of the night on a street with no streetlights. Every house you see is absolutely haunted by something and not just ghosts. Voodoo and hoodoo is different than what people will tell you it is.
Sassafrass, Cypress and Indigo by Ntozake Shange, Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jessamin Ward, and anything by Toni Morrison 100%.
To celebrate Black History Month in February, Interact-IF is bringing back one of its beloved events, spotlighting black authors and their interactive fiction projects!
We will feature a masterlist of interaction fiction written by black authors, and select a few to interview about their experiences and creative process! The interview will be done fully via a text Q&A format.
If you wish to be featured (whether in the masterlist or the extended interview), do fill out this google form. Or, if you prefer, you could drop me, @allieebobo a message or an email at [email protected] with the following information:
Name
Background/About you
Game(s)/Projects
A link to the game(s)/IF/intro post
A short blurb/description of the game(s)
Genre/Tags
(Optional) If your writing or experience has been shaped by your identity in any way, feel free to share more here as well :)
Contact information (or how youād like me to reply/contact you)
Do drop me a DM if you have any questions! Note that interactive fiction is not limited to Choicescript ā if youāre an author who uses a different coding language/platform (e.g. renāpy, twine) please know you are very welcome!
Note: If you would like to be part of the extended interview feature, it would be awesome if you could fill out the optional question as well in your message! I'll contact selected authors by email/DM by the end of the month with a full set of questions that you can type out replies to, and send back to me via email. Iāll try to feature everyone whoās interested, but will discuss further if for whatever reason I am unable to feature everyone who reached out.
P.S. If you know any authors who youād wish to see featured, feel free to share this post with them or @ them when reblogging :)
Check out the 2022 edition below!
February is BlackĀ History Month!
This month is all about celebrating black authors. We want to highlight the experiences and hard work done
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As part of Pride Month, interact-IF will be interviewing LGBTQ+ authors and featuring their games! We are planning a line-up of approximately ~10 interviews, kickstarted by our first author, @reinekes-fox!
Game: Grey Swan ā Birds of a Rose (Play Demo)
Tags: dark academia, drama, angst
Synopsis: Born and raised in a cult there is not much but the norm to follow, when outsiders are allowed in and bring with them such weird concepts like "bisexuality" and "mental illness", will you stay in the golden cage of the Divine Flock or break free?
Author: Aaron (@reinekes-fox)
About me: Been writing since I am 12 and⦠somehow never stopped! I put a big focus on platonic routes, the struggle in a world focused on romance (and in the cult setting on traditional gender roles as well) , since I am aroace :)
Read on for an awesome interview about the hydra-like nature of branching IFs, friendships being given just as much importance as romance routes, and a really intriguing pride month book rec!
Big thanks again to Aaron for taking time to do this. Read on for the interview!
Tell me more about yourself!
So I write since pretty much my entire life. But the first time I had to write something for school, Irefused. Funnily enough, it was about a talking bird trying to convince a child to let them out of a cage. I am currently also writing a traditional book!
2. Can you tell me a bit about what youāre working on right now and your journey into interactive fiction?
My main focus is on the first entry of my Grey Swan series: Birds of a Rose! I stumbled upon Choice of Games a couple years back (I still remember Choice of the Dragon without scrolling down), and finally decided to write out of the best reason: spite. Because the WIPs I liked kept being abandoned so I told myself I would do better! To this day, two years later, I am proud that I achieved that.
3. What are some of the most rewarding or challenging aspects of writing Interactive Fiction for you?
My most rewarding and challenging aspect is the branching, I describe it like a Hydra. It is easily the most challenging aspect (I have an entire file for it, just so that I don't forget any of that) and the most rewarding as I love to see my story grow in ways that don't feel forced.
4. How do you go about portraying queer characters, queer experiences, or queer storylines in your IF?
Now my story is very, very dark and even cishet people in it do get a fair amount of angst and drama, so most routes do focus on: finding a place in society, trying to either break down who you are to fit in or to look for a more accepting place elsewhere (even if it means leaving most you knew and loved behind)!
Otherwise I simply portray them as characters with needs and wants first, before they are queer. I also put a special focus on friendships (aro and ace routes counting towards that), since so often those are seen as lesser than romantic routes!
5. Any books, music, movies etc. youāre obsessed with at the moment, or which changed your life (or perspectives on something)?
Now, this also fits the pride month! The book Songbirds of Valnon by L.S. Baird.
It is so beautiful I had to stop and almost cry multiple times. It literally changed how I approach worldbuilding and I will always add a bit of it in all of my works. I can only recommend it, it is very much the opposite of my stories (it isn't nearly as dark for example), so if you want: badass disability rep, choir boys with magic, holy soldiers and a really awesome world, check it out! (She has also written other books, but, turns out writing yourself limits the time one can spend reading which is a shame!)
6. If you were to say one thing to your readers, other authors, and/or the interactive fiction community: what would it be?
Give feedback. Most often IF authors work full time, study full time, have an actual private life. I sacrifice most of my free time since two years to work on BoaR, and while I donāt regret it, it can feel very disheartening to not receive feedback for my work (on top of my actual work) and (like any creative person) it makes me immensely happy seeing it recognised.
----
Stay tuned for Pride Month Interview Feature #2 and #3 coming up this weekend!
Our third edition of the Black History Month Author Spotlight series, features Kiki (@scapegoated-if)!
(Iām rly happy to have gotten to know Kiki better through the feature, and the interview contains really interesting insights on gender and race-locked main characters in interactive fiction, among other things! If you havenāt yet played Scapegoated (and if youāre a fan of Infamous/music IFs, definitely give it a go!)
Author: Kiki
Born and raised North London, but ethnic background Jamaican (my parents are a part of the Windrush Gen)
Short blurb:
Scapegoated is about a female musician in a band that is seguing into an acting career. She is facing a lot of blame and scandal regarding the split between her band that happened in 1968. Not only are a lot of the general public hurt and angry about it, but so is an infamous serial killer that has been terrorising the west coast...
Quotes from the interview
Iām from North London. My parents moved to London when they were children from the Caribbean and are a part of the Windrush generation. I am a black, bisexual woman growing up in the UK, a place that tends to disguise its wider prejudices as a classist issue in all cases.
[ā¦]
A huge part of my love for music is strongly intertwined with my relationship with my late father. He passed away in June of 2023, and he was very much so kickinā it in the ā70s. He was a DJ throughout his life, so the legacy of LPs that he left behind was unspeakable and very ā70s.
Read on for the full interview!
Tell me more about yourself! What are some things new readers or long-time readers might not know about you?
I graduated from a Russell Group university with an English Literature BA (Hons). I think a part of me has always wanted to be a writer in some capacity; I know that Iāve always wanted to write a book. So, I think beginning this IF has existed for me as a gateway to see what that would be like. I thought of it as a brainteaserāthe prospect of exploring different outcomes and different pathways that a character may undertake. It has been challenging, dare I say more challenging than writing an actual book, but thatās exactly what I wanted out of this process.
Can you tell me a bit about what youāre working on right now and your journey into interactive fiction? What inspired the game/story youāre currently writing?
My best friend introduced me to the world of interactive fiction one day last year. She introduced Infamous to me and asserted that I would really like it because Iām a huge music nerd. Of course I fell in love with the characters and the world, but I also fell in love with the format of IFs.Ā
A huge part of my love for music is strongly intertwined with my relationship with my late father. He passed away in June of 2023, and he was very much so kickinā it in the ā70s. He was a DJ throughout his life, so the legacy of LPs that he left behind was unspeakable and very ā70s. I am a huge music lover with such a wide-spanning eclectic taste, but the period of music post-āDylan going electricā, post-āElvis being on the outā, Quincy Jones (rest in king) and Beatlemania is just everything to me, so the idea for Scapegoated came into my life in a very natural way. I knew that whichever story I told, I wanted it to explore the Sunset Strip, groupies, rock ān roll, The Beatles, The Manson Family and Cher all at its core.Ā
I am of the opinion that coverage of the ā70s music scene has been run into the ground lately. There has been a resurgence of nostalgia within the public consciousness when reflecting upon this time due to Daisy Jones & The Six, which was one of my favourite shows the year it was released. So, including Hollywood and murder was my attempt at innovation.
How has your identity, heritage/background, upbringing, or personal experiences influenced your storytelling or writing process? OR How does your work feature aspects of your identity / experience?
Iām from North London. My parents moved to London when they were children from the Caribbean and are a part of the Windrush generation. I am a black, bisexual woman growing up in the UK, a place that tends to disguise its wider prejudices as a classist issue in all cases. I am writing Scapegoated as someone that has only been to the US twice for two weeks at a time. I am writing Scapegoated as someone that can only relate to two aspects of my main character. I am writing Scapegoated as someone that has experienced discrimination and has been scarred by instances of discrimination. In university, I tended to be quite outspoken; in my first year, I felt quite ostracised by my predominantly white cohort during the BLM movement, because I seemed to be the only one willing to speak out in favour of it.
When I first wrote Scapegoated, I was inboxed on Tumblr and replied to on the Choice of Games Forum with genuine curiosity about my choice to gender and race lock my protagonist. This is an excerpt of my response:
I didnāt want to have a self-insert MC because I wanted to ensure that the conversations had revolving these social issues and the murders that unfold arenāt danced around. Perspective is an extremely important factor in that, and I want to ensure that the MC is directly involvedārather than just there as things happen because it wouldnāt be interactive. [...] Initially when I planned this story, before it was titled and the only thing I knew was that I wanted to write an IF about the '70s music scene, it was neither gender or race locked [...]. But I did toy with my ideas by self-inserting (Iām a black woman) when I was attempting to figure out the logistics of gameplay. Thatās when I realised that due to the time period and all of the change that was happening at the time, social issues had to be discussed.
To this day, I am extremely proud of my decision and the conviction in my decision. I asserted a level of loyalty to the story I am telling in a way that I didnāt know I was capable of; retrospectively, I think I took a kind of power in it. But I really love the story I am telling and the range of representation.Ā
I am trying to work the line of prioritising my vision, all the while giving weight and importance to my readersā opinions in the way that these very interesting and thorough opinions deserve. It warms my heart that even one person might care about my characters just as much as I do.
what are some of the most rewarding or challenging aspects of writing Interactive Fiction for you?
Songwriting. Iām tragic at it, but I like to think Iām self-aware enough. There are different characters with different voices and different reasonings behind their songwriting styles. I struggle to ensure that their songwriting oozes with their individual personalities.Ā
What does your writing process look like? Any rituals or habits? Any tips, tricks, philosophies or approaches that have worked very well for you?
Story beats. However, planning and writing can exist as two entirely different realms to me. What I think the story may be, can develop into something entirely new all on its own once I begin to write. Sometimes characters that I think I know transform into someone entirely new once I start to get to know them through writing their dialogue. Iāve experienced this with several characters already. On the contrary, some characters are so secure in my mind that they canāt be anything other than who Iāve introduced them to myself as.
I really love the writing process Iāve conjured up. It hasnāt failed me yet, but it isnāt secureāwriting can never be anything other than an insecure process. Writing, for me, always remains in a constant stage of planning.
Do you have favourite interactive fiction games, characters, scenes or authors that youād like to recommend?
I have received a lot of IF recommendations due to how new I am to IFs. I truly havenāt read very many, so all I can recommend to anybody are the 3 IFs that I have read which I each loved enormously: Infamous; College Tennis: Origin Story; and Apartment 502.
If you were to say one thing to your readers, other authors, and/or the interactive fiction community: what would it be?
I only got here in December, and so far everyone has been extremely welcoming and helpful. Honestly, I have no notes. All I can do is encourage everyone to give writing a chance. Itās been so fruitful and rewarding for me, so I strongly urge everyone to give it a shot if youāre considering it. Stop thinking, just do!
Any books, music, movies etc. youāre obsessed with at the moment, or which changed your life (or perspectives on something)?
Iām currently reading Iām With The Band by Pamela Des Barres as research for my IF, which has been a great insight into the mindset of groupies on an intimate level.
As for something that changed my life, I recently watched Sing Sing (2024)--which wasnāt something I did in relation to Scapegoated, I am just an avid film-watcherāand it was such an incredible de-stigmatising eye into the prison system. An extremely important watch for Black History Month, too!
This-or-that segment: (bold = Kiki's pick)
Coffee or tea?
Early mornings or late nights?
City or countryside?
Angsty or Cozy romances? (Or enemies-to-lovers or best-friends-to-lovers?)Ā Ā
Steady progress or frenzied binge-writing followed by periods of calm?
Summer or Winter?
First drafts or editing?
Introvert or extrovert?
Plotter or pantser?
Characters or plot first?
Kikiās custom āeither-orā pairing: writing in silence or with music playing?