1st Edition
Freelance Video Game Writing The Life & Business of the Digital Mercenary for Hire
In the competitive world of video game writing and narrative design, developers are losing permanent positions while freelancing careers are on the rise. Many developers don’t understand how to seize these freelancing opportunities, such as understanding the business of freelancing, how to go about finding work, how to establish strong relationships with clients, and how to sustain themselves as freelancers. Freelance Video Game Writing: The Life & Business of the Digital Mercenary for Hire offers developers guidance on achieving their freelancing goals as telecommuters. Dr. Toiya Kristen Finley presents practical insight into the profession and how to further enhance your freelancing business, whether you are a newcomer in the field or an experienced freelancer.
Key Features:
- Two sections covering the life of the freelancer and the freelance business
- Fifteen interviews from narrative designers, game writers, and other developers on topics from maintaining a healthy work–life balance to figuring out your rates to working a full-time job and freelancing on the side
- A comprehensive list of definitions with which freelancers need to be familiar
- Exercises to help augment your understanding of freelancing and improve your business
Glossary
Part I: The Freelance Life
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: There's No One Path...and Here's Mine
Chapter 3: Your Network: It's More Than the Contacts You Collect-It's Your Community
Chapter 4: Be Kind to Yourseld
Chapter 5: What a Freelancer Is, and What a Freelancer Is Not
Chapter 6: The Telecommuting Freelancer Starter Pack
Part II: The Freelance Business
Chapter 7: The Skills Every Freelancer Needs
Chapter 8: The Freelance Life Is a Research Life (Especially When It Comes to the Legal Stuff)
Chapter 9: How to Get Experience If You Don't Have It
Chapter 10: The Online (?) Portfolio
Chapter 11: Where to Find Work
Chapter 12: Establishing Your Rates: The Eternal Freelancer Question
Chapter 13: Developing and Maintaining Great Client Relationships (and What to Do About the Bad Ones)
Chapter 14: Please Learn from My Ignorance
Chapter 15: Some Final Thoughts
Index
Biography
Nashville native Toiya Kristen Finley, Ph.D., has been a freelancing writer and editor her entire adult life. She earned a doctorate in literature and creative writing from Binghamton University. Over her career, she has published more than 80 works of fiction, nonfiction, comics/manga, and games, and has over 20 years of experience writing in a range of genres, tones, styles, and voices. She gained editorial experience interning at Henry Holt’s imprint, Owl Books. At Binghamton, she founded the literary journal Harpur Palate and served as its managing/fiction editor. In 2011, she cofounded the Game Writing Tutorial at GDC Online with Tobias Heussner and served as an instructor in 2011 and 2012. In videogames, she has worked as a game designer, narrative designer, game writer, editor, and diversity/narrative consultant (or some combination of the five) on everything from AAA titles to mobile games to games for children to small indie projects. Recent work includes writing visual novel Siren Song (Stardust Works), copyediting for Destiny 2 (Bungie), and developmental editing on Insecure: The Come Up Game (Glow Up Games). A presenter at conferences throughout the year, she has lectured on freelancing and storytelling and led workshops on narrative design and game design. She is a member of the IGDA Game Writing Special Interest Group’s Executive Board. The Game Narrative Toolbox (CRC Press), a book on narrative design she coauthored with Jennifer Brandes Hepler, Ann Lemay, and Tobias Heussner, was published in 2015. Narrative Tactics for Mobile and Social Games: Pocket-Sized Storytelling (CRC Press), which she edited and contributed to, was published in 2019. Of late, she has been working on her own visual novel series, beginning with Incarnō: Everything Is Written.