Goodreads
asked
Andrew Rowe:
If you could travel to any fictional book world, where would you go and what would you do there?
Andrew Rowe
The cheating answer is Sufficiently Advanced Magic, because I wrote it with that sort of concept in mind. I like the idea of a setting where anyone can earn magic and power through hard work and dedication, rather than just being born with a special quality like in most other settings.
Aside from my own works, I'd rather travel to other worlds with similar characteristics. For example, I'd be happy to move to the setting of Hunter x Hunter if I'd be able to learn to manipulate nen. (This presumes that human physiology there is compatible with ours, which it might not be.) I like the flexibility of that style of magic, and the fact that it appears to be broadly available.
Many LitRPG settings also work like this - being transported into the setting of Ascend Online would probably be pretty fun, for example, as long as I could pick my character class and level normally, and that all of the game mechanics still applied (e.g. respawns).
The method of transit is also relevant. Many isekai novels involve being transported to another world and getting a clear advantage in the process; an extreme example would be Evil God Average. I'd be interested in one of those as long as I'd also be able to acquire a similar degree of advantage to those characters.
Really, the key is finding a setting where a) I could reliably find a way to work to earn magic, and b) the setting isn't hyper-dangerous to ordinary humans.
Aside from my own works, I'd rather travel to other worlds with similar characteristics. For example, I'd be happy to move to the setting of Hunter x Hunter if I'd be able to learn to manipulate nen. (This presumes that human physiology there is compatible with ours, which it might not be.) I like the flexibility of that style of magic, and the fact that it appears to be broadly available.
Many LitRPG settings also work like this - being transported into the setting of Ascend Online would probably be pretty fun, for example, as long as I could pick my character class and level normally, and that all of the game mechanics still applied (e.g. respawns).
The method of transit is also relevant. Many isekai novels involve being transported to another world and getting a clear advantage in the process; an extreme example would be Evil God Average. I'd be interested in one of those as long as I'd also be able to acquire a similar degree of advantage to those characters.
Really, the key is finding a setting where a) I could reliably find a way to work to earn magic, and b) the setting isn't hyper-dangerous to ordinary humans.
More Answered Questions
Jake
asked
Andrew Rowe:
First of all, I really appreciate your concern for the LGBTQ+ community. I think it is really great to have an author I admire so much be so cool and supportive. But, I came to ask a question so anyway, why did early attunements give people mana poisoning? because from my understanding (which obviously is inferior to yours since you wrote it) attunements just let the body use mana on its own.
James
asked
Andrew Rowe:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I just finished binging all your books for the first time, very fun reads, love the humor and references. Quick question in book 3 of AA Corin pulls out his lantern in the tiger spire, and his transference sword in the crystal temple, but weren't both of those items lost or destroyed in the previous book? He didnt mention remaking them and he even said he had out grown the sword.
(hide spoiler)]
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