Tag Archives: Patreon

July Patreon Content Up

July’s installment of A Soldier’s Guide to the Infinite Sea is now up and available for viewing. This section covers the preparations made by the Duke of Wulfram’s army prior to the fateful battle at Blogia, as well as the events leading up to the first shots being fired. There’s lots of details about Wulfram’s battle plan, as well as a surprise appearance by a certain junior officer of the Royal Dragoons.

Next month’s article will finally get into the first few hours of the battle itself.

As always, if you’re interested in seeing more of this stuff, feel free to donate to my Patreon. Not only would you be supporting further content like this, but you’ll also get access to updates a week early!


June Patreon Content Update

It’s the second week of the month, and that means another Patron-funded installment of A Soldier’s Guide to the Infinite Sea is now available for general viewing.

This section of the Welles Report deals with the Antari army which faced the Duke of Wulfram at Blogia. Like the previous entry, it goes into detail about the organisation, leadership and weaponry of Antari army. It also digresses into a summary of the family history of its commander, Prince Khorobirit.

Next month’s installment will begin describing the events which led to the battle proper, the preparations Wulfram made, and his reasons for choosing to stand and fight where he did.

As usual, if you’d like to get access to these updates a week early, or if you’d like to simply support my worldbuilding articles, please feel free to donate to my Patreon. We’re nearing the $150/month mark right now. If we go over it, that means next month’s update may also include some maps, or other images.

Even we don’t, I can assure you it’ll have plenty of content to look forward to.


New Patreon Content Up

This month’s entry for A Soldier’s Guide to the Infinite Sea is now up. This portion of the Countess of Welles’ report focuses primarily on the organisation of the Tierran Army, as well as its institutional flaws and strengths. In addition, it covers the leadership, equipment, and the experiences of the Tierran expeditionary force in the first half of the war. It’s considerably longer than the first part (which was merely an introduction), so it does get to go into a great deal of detail as well: a product of the months of worldbuilding which went into making sure that the portrayals of the King’s Army in Sabres of Infinity and Guns of Infinity were not only faithful to the limitations of pre-industrial early modern warfare, but to the society and politics of the Unified Kingdom of Tierra, and the setting as a whole.

If you want to support more of this sort of intensive worldbuilding in my future works, please feel free to donate to my Patreon. Not only do patrons get access to these articles a week in advance, they’ll also be able to input their own suggestions for future articles once my page gets off the ground.


Introducing: A Soldier’s Guide to the Infinite Sea

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Today marks the release of the first installment of my Patreon-funded series: A Soldier’s Guide to the Infinite Sea, a monthly column dedicated to exploring the culture, history, and politics of the Infinite Sea, the setting of Sabres of Infinity and Guns of Infinity. While patrons do get access to funded content a week in advance, all content will be openly available for free on this site via the Patreon Content page.


Patreon Page Now Online

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Over the past few months, I’ve been coming to the realisation that the sort of in-depth world-building I do for works like Sabres of Infinity aren’t particularly financially sustainable. By spending months and months tweaking cultural biases and orders of battle, I’m able to make my stories take place in richer, fuller worlds. Skimping on the process leads occasionally to works which could have ended up being better. However, spending all that time on it also slows down my writing process appreciably, to the point where I’m not really doing paying work at the rate that I’d really want to. Guns of Infinity has proven to be a pretty good example of that: taking the time to build up the political and cultural forces that drive the story have made it a better one, but it has also taken the better part of eighteen months, and releasing one title every year and a half isn’t really anything I can live off of by itself.

So, I’ve decided to fuel my “extracurricular” worldbuilding with a Patreon page. In exchange for the funding provided by generous patrons, I intend to make publish a series of articles on the settings of my two ongoing series (The Infinite Sea of Sabres/Guns of Infinity, and The Concordat of The Hero of Kendrickstone). These articles will deliver in-depth explanations and examinations of the culture, politics, and minutiae of these settings, and will be made publicly available here on this website, in the hopes that you will enjoy reading about the details of my worlds as much as I enjoy creating them.

You can find my Patreon page here.

Secondly, some great news: barring any sort of major emergency, Guns of Infinity will be releasing tomorrow. It bears repeating that due to the way that Choice of Games has to juggle a release on six separate platforms with six different approval processes that this is not guaranteed. However, if nothing horrible happens, then everyone should be able to get their hands on a release copy sometime in the next twenty-four hours.