ffproject.com Picture



home
faq
rules
links
downloads
guestbook
contact


gamebooks
Escape The Asylum
Gem Runner
A Princess Of Zamarra
A Saint Beckons
A Day In The Life
Rise Of The Night Creatures
New Day Rising
Bloodsworth Bayou
Golem Gauntlet
Shrine Of The Salamander
A Flame In The North
A Shadow In The North
Escape Neuburg Keep
Any Port In A Storm
Below Zero Point
Tales From The Bird Islands
The Ravages Of Fate
Nye's Song
A Knight's Trial
Return To G15-275
Devil's Flight
Above The Waves
The Curse Of Drumer
The Word Fell Silent
A Strange Week For King Melchion The Despicable
Sharkbait's Revenge
Tomb Of The Ancients
A Midwinter Carol
The Dead World
Waiting For The Light
Contractual Obligation
Garden Of Bones
The Hypertrout
The Golden Crate
In The Footsteps Of A Hero
Soul Tracker
Planet Of The Spiders
Beggars Of Blacksand
The Diamond Key
Wrong Way Go Back
Hunger Of The Wolf
Isle Of The Cyclops
The Cold Heart Of Chaos
The Black Lobster
Impudent Peasant!
Curse Of The Yeti
Bad Moon Rising
Riders Of The Storm
Bodies In The Docks
House Of Horror
Rebels Of The Dark Chasms
Midnight Deep
Lair Of The Troglodytes
Outsider!
The Trial Of Allibor's Tomb
Hellfire

RSS Feed Twitter

Windhammer Competition




Robert Douglas
Wed Nov 11 17:06:16 2015
I've also found some Windhammer gamebook reviews on the following link:

http://international.librojuegos.org

Andrew Wright
Thu Nov 12 03:31:08 2015
IF means Interactive Fiction, which are basically old-school style text adventures. Hence their possible aversion to rules, dice-rolling, and, gasp, random events.

Robert Douglas
Thu Nov 12 04:24:41 2015
@ Andrew,
I remember those 'Choose your own Adventure', where the reader simply made choices - no dice, no scores, no attributes. Just choices. Would those be classed as IF? I'm also wondering if anybody ever read the Grail Quest series? It was a parody of King Arthur, Merlin, and his knights, with Pip being the player's character. I bought one from a second-hand bookshop years ago. It was a well-written and very tongue-in-cheek adventure. But both FF and Lone Wolf dominated the market so Grail Quest, Way of the Tiger, etc never really got a look in.

Gavin
Fri Nov 13 09:13:02 2015
I read and liked the Grail Quest books but the joke got tired around the fifth book, with ridiculous multi-party combat.

Andrew Wright
Sun Nov 22 03:30:51 2015
Stillman's reviews are up:

http://stillmanscifi.com/windhammer-reviews.html

Ooh, they burn, they do...

Tammy
Sun Nov 22 07:46:08 2015
Just got the email. I'm really proud to see who won first prize. :)

Robert Douglas
Sun Nov 22 12:21:01 2015
Well done to the prize winner, merit, and commendation awardees. My bold knight jousted but was unseated and hit the dust. Looking forward to next year's Windhammer tourney.

Andrew Wright
Sun Nov 22 14:54:01 2015
Yep that was a good winner! :-) Back to the drawing board...

Wayne Densley
Tue Nov 24 00:57:43 2015
Arborell.com is pleased to announce that the 2015 Windhammer Prize for Short Gamebook Fiction has been won by Felicity Banks for her alternate historical adventure, After the Flag Fell. Merit awards have been won by Philip Armstrong for his quirky fantasy adventure, Sabrage, and Richard Penwarden for his fantastical western, Gunsmoke Along the Fey Frontier. Also this year Commendations have been awarded to Tides of Chrome by Steffen Hagen, Droidchangers: Fight or Die by Andy Moonowl and Alchemist's Apprentice by John Evans. Congratulations to all who have found success.

Sixteen entries were accepted for the 2015 competition, the high quality of those entries a testament to the talent and originality of the authors who took part. It proved again gratifying to see the wide range of genre and subject matter that encompassed this year's competition. In a list of well written and innovative gamebooks alternate histories and fantastical worlds sat comfortably alongside hard-metal sci-fi and real world adventure. Amongst these entries magic found its place once again and brooding horror lurked at every turn. All things considered a truly excellent range of new gamebooks.

As with last year the 2015 competition proved a remarkably close and hard-fought contest, with many strong contenders for the six awards. All who have taken part this year should be proud of the quality of the entries they submitted. It indeed bodes well for 2016, gamebooks in general, and the continuing success of the Windhammer Prize.

As has been the case in past years all entries have now been placed into the Windhammer Prize gamebook archive and can be accessed from that page along with all other gamebooks submitted to the competition since 2008.

May Glory and Renown follow all who entered.

Regards
Wayne Densley
http://www.arborell.com/windhammer_prize.html

Andrew
Mon Sep 5 18:37:16 2016
Anyone entering Windhammer 2016? I'm trying rapidly to beat the clock and put the finishing touches on my latest gamebook entrant.

Robert Douglas
Mon Sep 5 23:31:07 2016
Hi Andrew,
Good luck in Windhammer 2016. In answer to your question: no. Perhaps in the future I'll enter the tourney field again.

A.E. Johnston
Wed Sep 7 20:16:14 2016
Hi Andrew, no unfortunately not this year. I had an entry for 2015, and I have a great story I'm working on, but I need more time to work on it and have other obligations at the moment. I would like to enter it next year though.

On a side note, good to see you Robert, haven't been on in a while and always nice to see someone familiar and friendly.

Robert Douglas
Thu Sep 8 00:30:24 2016
Hi A.E.Johnston,
Good to see you too! I've been around for about a couple of weeks after a lengthy period of inactivity (FF Project-wise). Like you said: obligations. If things go okay for me, I won't be around for a couple of months as I've applied for a new job and I'll be concentrating on my reading. I do have a short adventure in the works but it's intended for something other than Windhammer. If it's not accepted then I can always have it posted on FF Project. Apart from that, Sean Calibre Book 2 is also a work in progress.

Andrew Wright
Fri Sep 9 11:29:58 2016
Unfortunately it got cancelled this year. Not enough entrants. :-(

Robert Douglas
Fri Sep 9 17:15:06 2016
It's a shame that Windhammer got cancelled. How many entrants put their names down?

Yaztromo
Fri Sep 9 21:21:24 2016
I can't believe it!!!

Tammy
Sun Sep 11 05:49:47 2016
I think changes have to be made to it especially how readers vote. The voting process is ridiculous I've been told. I'd be happy with just three types of winning levels rather than six but this is just my opinion. I never entered this year and probably won't in future, not that windhammer is a bad thing, it can be good for morale and break it too.

A.E. Johnston
Mon Sep 19 06:50:54 2016
Oh wow, that's really shocking. Last year had something like 16 entrants. I hope I have time to submit something next year this is really a great competition and I really enjoy supporting it.

Stuart Lloyd
Sun Sep 26 18:31:37 2021
For all those who miss the Windhammer competition, come to my blog on the 3rd October where I will announce the first Lindenbaum Prize for short gamebook fiction.
http://www.lloydofgamebooks.com

Stuart Lloyd
Tue Sep 28 10:05:08 2021
@Tammy

What changes would you propose and why?

Asking for a friend.



Post Message

Name


Comments

 
 
If you can read this, don't touch the following text fields.