Fighting Fantasy

From 2d4chan
Revision as of 18:52, 13 February 2013 by 86.158.33.87 (talk) (Spelling correction and slight rewording)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub. You can help 1d4chan by expanding it

Created by Ian Livingstone and the other Steve Jackson (not the one from Texas), Fighting Fantasy is a series of adventure game books from the 1980's. These were the same guys who founded Games Workshop.

Unlike a normal boring book you get to make choices in the story as you are the hero. Usually it's either you succeed or you go down the wrong corridor and die.The story does not progress in a linear fashion but rather is divided into a series of numbered sections. Beginning at the first section, the reader chooses an option (e.g. Section 1 to Section 180) which in turn provides an outcome for the decision and advances the story. Usually. What actually happens is most people read all the potential options, and then pick one. This leads to multiple bookmarks and fingers being jammed in the book.

Also, dice are involved (but not really!) you're supposed to roll two dice during combat but no-one ever does. Keeping your thumb on the page where you are and then flipping back if you mess up and die. Sometimes the authors would put in some maths question to make you think and stop the reader from cheating.

Awesome illustrations were used to help depict where you were. A variety of books were printed starting with the Warlock of Firetop mountain more titles followed such as The Forest of Doom and Appointment with F.E.A.R (for which UK comic artist Brian Bolland provided the illustrations).

Apart from single player books, several multi-player roleplay books came out such as the Riddling Reaver and Dungeoneer. Art books such as "Out of the Pit" with illustrations by Christos Achilleos were released as well. Also some computer game versions came out, like "Forest of Doom" on the ZX Spectrum and "DeathTrap Dungeon" on the PC and Playstation 1. There was also a mediocre "Warlock of Firetop Mountain" boardgame. Eventually after exhausting the thesarus and dictionary of cool words to send the readers to, the series stopped. Reprints of the fighting fantasy books have since been issued.