Virtual Stars Part 2: The Advantages

So last column I explored just why someone would want to make a Virtual Star, that star being defined by the following traits:

  1. The creation of a completely artificial media figure whose image, behavior, story, and personality are made up.
  2. This entity has no single component traceable as a contribution of an actual human being – no single voice actor, artist, etc.  The Virtual Star is an entirely artistic creation that cannot be rendered down to being identified with a single person, unlike an animated character with a popular voice actor or being distinctly modeled on a single human being.
  3. The entity is treated as real in most media produced around it, but it is acknowledged that the entity is completely virtual.

I then explored why I thought that the creation of a virtual star was a viable venture due to culture and resources:

  1. There have always been virtual stars or creations like virtual stars, especially for the youth.
  2. Regular stars have often been fictionalized.  People have come to accept some fictionalization of celebrities.
  3. Reality Television creates stars by mixing real-life and fiction.  This further blurs the fiction-fact boundary.
  4. Games have people used to using technology to produce memorable characters and fans have responded.
  5. Technology allows for creation of the elements needed to create a Virtual Star easily.

So the question then comes: what is the reason to create a Virtual Star?  Frankly I can think of a lot:

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Go Farther: Fantasy Game Economics

Some time ago I wrote, wistfully, that writers of fictions and worldbuilders of all kinds could do better – and have interesting ideas if they focused on economics.  Economics helps you build a world, create plots, and of course, make a story more relatable since we deal with economic issues all the times.

I'd like to return to that issue by noting a specific area of fantasy fiction and gaming – especially gaming – that I'd like to addressed further.  Those of you writing, those of you building games, and so on, keep this in mind.  It will help you create better.

(And this issue really bugs me).

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Go Farther: Skins And Beyond

The presence of the Kno and similar specialty devices and specially-configured general computing device made me think of one thing – "pre-loaded software."

Remember when pre-loaded software was the bane of a new computer?  Where a system, no matter how pristine, too often came with assorted programs, tools, and invasive software you'd never planned to use?  Now it's a selling point – because people are getting pre-loaded software they want.  Which made me think of some other potentials . . .

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