How I Captured the World of Ignatius-Valdis

When I set out to write Ignatius‑Valdis, my aim was simple: build a world that feels lived in, intense in action, and intimate enough for readers to lose themselves inside the simulation. This tale speaks to a science‑fiction audience hungry for momentum—explosions, desperate gambits, and the clatter of boot‑heels on alloy decks—while also rewarding readers who want systems, lineage, and society to matter as much as the firefights. To achieve that balance I concentrated on three interlocked efforts: the mechanics of power, the texture of civilisation, and the emotional weight of conflict. Central to the world are the Excelian Centurions of the Fire Reserve—soldiers honed to operate within a hostile simulation where a ravenous virus corrodes code and corpses alike. The Excelians are not a monolith; their competency springs from distinct bloodlines, each with its own energetic logic and cultural identity: Angelus lines channel lighter elements—luminosity, order, subtle radiances that can slice through chaos and stabilise collapsing systems—while Deamone lines favour heavy elements—density, gravity, crushing force that reshapes terrain and shatters shields—and Neutralus lines temper extremes, blending or nullifying forces to harmonise or disrupt.

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