It's been a wild ride for this Backerkit campaign. Sarah did 17 million livestreams, Geeked and Sketched it Up, ate space food with Bob and the team, we made cool ID badges, we laughed, we cried, we discussed the finer intricacies of robot cats in space...and regular cats while we were at it....
Unfortunately, this campaign isn't going to make it. We blasted out of Earth's orbit and ran out of rations halfway through the trip. BUT WE WON'T GIVE UP. OR SURRENDER. We restarted the ship manually, killed an unruly crew member, ate him, and are resuming launch, RIGHT NOW, on Kickstarter to try to hit our goal there and get this wonderful book made. (We're just kidding about killing and eating someone, by the way).
Science fiction comes in many flavors, from hard sci-fi, like The Martian, where a misaligned strut leads to catastrophic failure, all the way to soft sci-fi, like Star Trek, where a few tachyons shot from a deflector dish will solve 9/10 problems. Granica is on the harder side, approximately on a level with The Expanse, for at least the first half of season 1. What intensity do you prefer, and what is your go-to example?
It's been a wild ride for this Backerkit campaign. Sarah did 17 million livestreams, Geeked and Sketched it Up, ate space food with Bob and the team, we made cool ID badges, we laughed, we cried, we discussed the finer intricacies of robot cats in space...and regular cats while we were at it....
Unfortunately, this campaign isn't going to make it. We blasted out of Earth's orbit and ran out of rations halfway through the trip. BUT WE WON'T GIVE UP. OR SURRENDER. We restarted the ship manually, killed an unruly crew member, ate him, and are resuming launch, RIGHT NOW, on Kickstarter to try to hit our goal there and get this wonderful book made. (We're just kidding about killing and eating someone, by the way).