Happy World Book Day! What better way to celebrate on Eurogamer than to think of some of our favourite connections between games and books. We hope you have a lovely day spent reading.
Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy
Meeting a freshly formed team of unlikely heroes with a perfect balance of contempt for one another and sarcastic quips would have been enough, but M.K England took it one step further. Their book seamlessly alternates between the present time, before we meet the team in the 2021 game, and 12 years before that, where a young Peter Quill encounters Ko-Rel while battling the Chitarui on Mercury. Sure, inferring parts of their relationship in the main game is part of the charm, but having a book that explores a big point in the history displayed between the Commander and the rogue Ravager makes their eventual alliance all the more bitter-sweet.
– Marie
Elite’s novella, The Dark Wheel
Not satisfied with creating a procedural Thatcherite universe filled with trading, dog-fighting, and a pure thrill of exploration, the original Elite shipped with a novella by Robert Holdstock, called The Dark Wheel. This is a seriously good idea, and it’s a shame more games don’t opt to include something like this with their physical releases. Art books are fine, sure, but an actual piece of fiction? Yes please. Or maybe just a few poems. Looking at you, Mario.
– Donlan
BioShock and Ayn Rand
If you’re going to create a failed state for a video game, it helps if you have some ready-to-go failed state philosophies to back it all up. No wonder, then, that Rapture’s creators co-opted Ayn Rand’s work for its tale of a rotten city where everyone’s completely vile.
– Donlan
Skyfaring and Flight Sim
Flight Sim predates Skyfaring, but the book and the game are natural siblings. Flight Sim gives you the entire world to coast across, while Skyfaring, by British Airways pilot and natural poet Mark Vanhoenacker, is a searching examination of why we love the sky so much, and why flight is such a glorious human experience. This book rules, even if you’re afraid of flying. In fact, if you’re afraid of flying, it actually helps a bit!
– Donlan
PUBG and Lord of the Flies
Or more specifically: that one bit on the little starter island while everyone’s loading into PUBG, and Lord of the Flies. Funny how when you drop a load of virtual humans on a virtual island, and only give them the tools to jump, crouch, fire guns, and punch, that it soon devolves into mindless violence. Makes you think!
– Chris Tapsell
Mass Effect: Revelation
And it was a revelation, this book. It was the first book, I think, that ever accompanied Mass Effect, written by the game’s lead writer Drew Karpyshyn in order to introduce BioWare’s new gaming universe to the world. It was the origin story, really, about humans discovering the Mass Effect relays and then what happened next – how humans joined a galactic council and started hanging out with other species, which I found – and still find – just the coolest idea ever.