
They're not the only companies experimenting with shifting digital comics beyond hi-res PDFs. Project Wonderful was showing off Clown Commandos as well, However, there was a big and highly unsuccessful push on interactive comics a decade ago. This time around, publishers are betting that the ubiquity of tablets, pads and smart phones, plus the current state of touch-screen technology and development tools like the drag-and-drop GameSalad Creator, have been a game changer. GameSalad Austin head of internal game development Billy Garretsen said that, unlike a project like James O'Barr's long-awaited Gothic Western Sundown, "It's not a motion comic, it's not an animation put together with comics graphics that leads you through the story automatically." Instead, the reader will engage with the comic itself. "Let's say I have an alleyway brawl, and there's a fire hydrant. I tap the fire hydrant and it explodes and in the next five panels there's water on the ground."
While the overall story will remain the same for all readers, Mohr said they are already exploring "new elements that have not really been tried in the comic form, such as finding hidden content and reaching milestones." There will also be bonus material, such as reading journals, and the opportunity for the writers to go back and re-tell certain pivotal events from a different character's point of view. "That way," Mohr said, "we can reward you for completing the whole series."
GameSalad plans to have the preview demo and app for Redemption (or whatever the final title is: That may change before the issue 0 teaser ships) up on the Droid market in December, with the iPhone app to follow next year.
comic books, Wizard World, Redemption: The Challenge, GameSalad, Eden Films, PreCog Studios, Billy Garretsen, Rold Mohr, Frank Coppersmith, Interactive Comics