Description

Book Synopsis

The success of storytelling in games depends on the entire development teamgame designers, artists, writers, programmers and musicians, etc.working harmoniously together towards a singular artistic vision. Interactive Stories and Video Game Art is first to define a common design language for understanding and orchestrating interactive masterpieces using techniques inherited from the rich history of art and craftsmanship that games build upon. Case studies of hit games like The Last of Us, Journey, and Minecraft illustrate the vital components needed to create emotionally-complex stories that are mindful of gaming's principal relationship between player actions and video game aesthetics. This book is for developers of video games and virtual reality, filmmakers, gamification and transmedia experts, and everybody else interested in experiencing resonant and meaningful interactive stories.

Key Features:

  • The first book to de

    Trade Review

    "The convergence of narrative in film, video games, and virtual reality will fundamentally change the entertainment industry in coming years. Chris Solarski’s book gives content creators crucial insights into interactive story composition and how to adapt these concepts for transmedia storytelling."
    Marc Forster, Film Director and Producer

    "The clever thing about this book is that it bridges the worlds of game design and storytelling. I would recommend this to anyone who wants to get into game design and understand what’s going on beneath the surface. It reminds me of Robert McKee’s Story, the classic book on screenwriting. You read it and you think: Aha, this is how storytelling works in film, it really can be explained! And you can see this book as a companion volume that is essentially doing the same thing for games."
    Tom Standage, Deputy Editor and Digital Strategist of The Economist and a New York Times Bestselling Author

    "As a gamification designer you look for inspiration from multiple sources to create behavior-change and evoke emotions that help your audience make decisions. Chris Solarski captures brilliantly how dynamic composition techniques for transmedia storytelling can assist in reaching your audience through shapes, flow, positioning and much more."
    —An Coppens, Chief Game Changer at Gamification Nation Ltd.

    "Interactive Stories and Video Game Art touches upon factors that can be a barrier to the developers’ experience being actualised: managing player attention, dealing with memory, communicating how players should think about playing, in addition to the practicalities of play. I feel I have a more robust means of assessing the experience developers are aiming to achieve as a result of these guidelines. The contractual nature of my work also means that I’m tasked with quickly communicating the design intent between the dev team and my team. The visual communication symbols presented in each chapter are sure to play a part in that process moving forward."
    —Seb Long, UX Researcher at Player Research

    "As a game designer, I think Interactive Stories and Video Game Art is a must-read. I love how Chris Solarski puts game design and gameplay at the centre of the whole artistic process, so everything is easily applicable to any project and to both sides of development, to game design and graphics."
    —David Javet, Narrative Designer and Co-founder of Tchagata Games

    "This book is an eye-opener. I haven't been in the games loop for a while, but it transcends games. Reading it made me feel what I felt when I first studied cinematography."
    —Gustavo Sánchez-Perez, FX Artist at Mr. X

    "Chris Solarski's book is extremely ambitious; from the smallest detail to broad concepts that encompass an immense scale, its truly applied methodology serves as a catalyst that enriches the reader's heart and promotes the creation of pure art."

    Erik Anzi, Producer, Screenwriter, and Concept Artist on films including Ridley Scott's Alien and Blade Runner

    "The concepts presented in Interactive Stories and Video Game Art remind me of Joseph Campbell's powerful demonstration of a universal storytelling structure. Coming from a technical game design background yet being artistically inclined, I never considered that atomic elements such as shapes, lines of movement and transitions contain a vocabulary strong enough to sculpt our mood, whether consciously or unconsciously. This book creates that wonderful feeling of learning new letters, which soon prove useful to form sentences for bringing new poetry to the world."

    —Stéphane Assadourian, Veteran Game Production Consultant and founding member of Ubisoft's Assassins' Creed franchise



    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1 Character Shapes and Poses

    Chapter 2 Character Animations

    Chapter 3 Environment Shapes

    Chapter 4 Pathways

    Chapter 5 Framing

    Chapter 6 Player Gestures

    Chapter 7 Transitions in Games

    Chapter 8 Transitions With Cutscenes

    Chapter 9 Reiteration of Context

    Chapter 10 Transition Hazards

    Chapter 11 Transitions Without Cutscenes

    Chapter 12 Transitions in Open World Games.

Interactive Stories and Video Game Art

    Product form

    £44.64

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £46.99 – you save £2.35 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 15 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Chris Solarski

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Interactive Stories and Video Game Art by Chris Solarski

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
      Publication Date: 1/17/2017 12:01:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498781503, 978-1498781503
      ISBN10: 1498781500

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The success of storytelling in games depends on the entire development teamgame designers, artists, writers, programmers and musicians, etc.working harmoniously together towards a singular artistic vision. Interactive Stories and Video Game Art is first to define a common design language for understanding and orchestrating interactive masterpieces using techniques inherited from the rich history of art and craftsmanship that games build upon. Case studies of hit games like The Last of Us, Journey, and Minecraft illustrate the vital components needed to create emotionally-complex stories that are mindful of gaming's principal relationship between player actions and video game aesthetics. This book is for developers of video games and virtual reality, filmmakers, gamification and transmedia experts, and everybody else interested in experiencing resonant and meaningful interactive stories.

      Key Features:

      • The first book to de

        Trade Review

        "The convergence of narrative in film, video games, and virtual reality will fundamentally change the entertainment industry in coming years. Chris Solarski’s book gives content creators crucial insights into interactive story composition and how to adapt these concepts for transmedia storytelling."
        Marc Forster, Film Director and Producer

        "The clever thing about this book is that it bridges the worlds of game design and storytelling. I would recommend this to anyone who wants to get into game design and understand what’s going on beneath the surface. It reminds me of Robert McKee’s Story, the classic book on screenwriting. You read it and you think: Aha, this is how storytelling works in film, it really can be explained! And you can see this book as a companion volume that is essentially doing the same thing for games."
        Tom Standage, Deputy Editor and Digital Strategist of The Economist and a New York Times Bestselling Author

        "As a gamification designer you look for inspiration from multiple sources to create behavior-change and evoke emotions that help your audience make decisions. Chris Solarski captures brilliantly how dynamic composition techniques for transmedia storytelling can assist in reaching your audience through shapes, flow, positioning and much more."
        —An Coppens, Chief Game Changer at Gamification Nation Ltd.

        "Interactive Stories and Video Game Art touches upon factors that can be a barrier to the developers’ experience being actualised: managing player attention, dealing with memory, communicating how players should think about playing, in addition to the practicalities of play. I feel I have a more robust means of assessing the experience developers are aiming to achieve as a result of these guidelines. The contractual nature of my work also means that I’m tasked with quickly communicating the design intent between the dev team and my team. The visual communication symbols presented in each chapter are sure to play a part in that process moving forward."
        —Seb Long, UX Researcher at Player Research

        "As a game designer, I think Interactive Stories and Video Game Art is a must-read. I love how Chris Solarski puts game design and gameplay at the centre of the whole artistic process, so everything is easily applicable to any project and to both sides of development, to game design and graphics."
        —David Javet, Narrative Designer and Co-founder of Tchagata Games

        "This book is an eye-opener. I haven't been in the games loop for a while, but it transcends games. Reading it made me feel what I felt when I first studied cinematography."
        —Gustavo Sánchez-Perez, FX Artist at Mr. X

        "Chris Solarski's book is extremely ambitious; from the smallest detail to broad concepts that encompass an immense scale, its truly applied methodology serves as a catalyst that enriches the reader's heart and promotes the creation of pure art."

        Erik Anzi, Producer, Screenwriter, and Concept Artist on films including Ridley Scott's Alien and Blade Runner

        "The concepts presented in Interactive Stories and Video Game Art remind me of Joseph Campbell's powerful demonstration of a universal storytelling structure. Coming from a technical game design background yet being artistically inclined, I never considered that atomic elements such as shapes, lines of movement and transitions contain a vocabulary strong enough to sculpt our mood, whether consciously or unconsciously. This book creates that wonderful feeling of learning new letters, which soon prove useful to form sentences for bringing new poetry to the world."

        —Stéphane Assadourian, Veteran Game Production Consultant and founding member of Ubisoft's Assassins' Creed franchise



        Table of Contents

        Chapter 1 Character Shapes and Poses

        Chapter 2 Character Animations

        Chapter 3 Environment Shapes

        Chapter 4 Pathways

        Chapter 5 Framing

        Chapter 6 Player Gestures

        Chapter 7 Transitions in Games

        Chapter 8 Transitions With Cutscenes

        Chapter 9 Reiteration of Context

        Chapter 10 Transition Hazards

        Chapter 11 Transitions Without Cutscenes

        Chapter 12 Transitions in Open World Games.

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