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Announcing Dragons Vs Robots

It’s been a little over two months since I left my day job, and one of the wonderful discoveries I’ve made is that being a free agent gives me the opportunity to do all sorts of work with all sorts of different companies. (And work on my novel. Yes, that.) Over the summer I hooked up with Massiverse, a transmedia entertainment company based in New York, to help them prepare for their first big announcement: Dragons Vs Robots, a sci-fi/fantasy franchise designed for kids ages 9-14.

What’s transmedia, you ask? It’s a neat—and potentially very profitable—way of telling a story that uses multiple formats to draw out different parts of the narrative. As a writer, this concept excites me in an almost cosmic way, because I’ve always loved the idea that stories and characters exist in some other reality, and it’s the writer’s job to channel that reality and transcribe it. The idea of transmedia stimulates the same part of my brain that thought it was eerie-yet-awesome that all of JD Salinger’s characters, across all of his different novels and even some short stories, seemed to know each other. (Well, except for Holden Caufield. Whatever. Who’s even read Catcher in the Rye, anyway?)

This morning Massiverse formally announced Dragons Vs Robots with the unveiling of an online battle game and manga series, both of which are available for free at the Dragons Vs Robots website. A feature film is in the works (in collaboration with Jinks/Cohen Productions of American Beauty fame), along with young adult novels, online webisodes, toys, and a trading card line—all of which will tell the Dragons Vs Robots narrative in different ways, with stories intersecting and in some cases changing based on user participation. The results of the online battle game will influence the overall narrative. The toys and trading cards will link back to the online universe. From a business standpoint, it makes for many potential entry points and revenue streams, but even more exciting to me is the storytelling potential. Ambitious stuff.

If you’re curious about Dragons Vs Robots, here are some links to explore:

Oh, and I’m a dragon, if you were wondering.

Puzzle house, day 3

Today I finished putting together the structure (minus the roof) and applied all the siding. Wasted a ton of blue painter’s tape, but with good results!


Thank god for paint cans and those little pinchy things…

Lo and behold, I have a little house!


It seems weird to me that part of the main roof peeps out from under the dormer roof at the bottom. I’m planning to shave off those corners. The roof will be shingled with leftovers from my Fairfield.


While the siding glue was drying, I applied some wood filler to the front base (but not the back yet). I’m going to use the drum sander attachment on the Dremel to round off the porch corners… at the moment they’re dangerously pointy!

Tomorrow I’m going to start painting. The roof isn’t glued on yet; first I want to paint the undersides of the eaves, which I’ll do at the same time I’m painting the house. I’m planning to use “Belgian Waffle,” a creamy/peachy color I got free from Glidden when they were doing a promotion over the summer. Haven’t cracked it open yet so I’m not positive what it’ll look like, but here’s the paint chip (if the internet is to be believed). I’m not sure what color the trim will be… maybe light blue.

I went back and forth on whether to include the porch roof, and have decided to include it. Since my siding covered up the slots the roof was supposed to fit into, I’m planning to glue some 45-degree triangular blocks to the back of the roof and side of the house, to hold it in place. It’s an untested method but I think it’ll work.


Here’s sort of how it’ll look. But centered on the door, and without my hand attached to it.

While the glue was drying I went through my bin of kits and pulled out a few Cassidy Creations pieces that I want to build for this house: a china cabinet and kitchen table for the kitchen, and possibly this armoire for the bedroom. (Not sure about that one – it may be too tall to fit against any of the walls, due to the slanted roof.)

I’m thinking this house will be somewhat old timey, with a 1930’s range and fridge. I’d really like to find some Shaker style ladder back chairs to go in the kitchen and did a little looking around online, but so far haven’t found what I want. For the bedroom, I’m thinking of the cottage bed. I haven’t had any great ideas for the living room yet, or the smaller upstairs room. I’m not sure if I want it to be a bathroom… seems like a waste of a room (how original can you make a bathroom?)

Coming next time… paint!

Puzzle house, day 2

I’m loving how easy this house is to put together!

This morning I poked around at Michael’s and Dollhouses, Trains, and More, looking for scrapbook paper or wallpaper for the inside of the cottage. Nothing caught my eye and I decided to move forward with assembly and worry about the inside later. I have some ideas for furnishings already but it’s not stuff I already own, so there’s no rush.

At Michael’s I picked up a bottle of Gesso. I haven’t used it before but people on the Greenleaf forum recommended priming my windows and door with it so the paint will look the same on both (my windows are plastic and the door is wood, and I worried that the two different finishes would cause problems come painting time). While I was there I peeked in the craft department, as usual, and saw a ton of Creatology puzzles but no houses. Are wooden replicas of dinosaurs, skeletons, helicopters, and the Eifel Tower really popular enough to keep stocking them, but not the houses? I don’t get it.

I wanted some 7/16″ basswood for the base of the house, but the closest I could find was 3/8″. I also picked up some 1/4″ square basswood to use as porch posts, and half scale porch spindles. I’m pretty sure I already have railings tucked away somewhere.

Since the 3/8″ basswood was a little too short to fill the gap under the porch the way I wanted, I improvised by first gluing some (slightly thicker than 1/16″) trim from the kit that I’m not planning to use to the bottom of the porch and at the back of the floor.


This is the trim marked “A” and “C” in the kit, if you thinking of trying this yourself.

While that was drying, I cut the basswood to size, then glued that on over the trim.


The basswood I used is 3/8″ square, which makes for a nice sturdy base. I didn’t go all the way around with it – just used it in places where you could see a gap.

The basswood plus trim was a bit taller than what I needed, leaving a slight gap where the sides were no longer sitting flush on the table, but I used the mouse sander and some plain old sandpaper to even it out. (Alternatively I could have used siding to cover up the slight gap at the bottom sides but since I already cut my siding last night, that wasn’t an option.) I still need to apply some wood filler, to even out the seams where the different pieces of wood meet, but I think it’ll look real nice when it’s done… much classier than the original design that had an open space under the porch and the floor.

When that was done, I cut the rest of the siding for the front of the house and did a bit of sanding around the window holes to make sure everything will fit well. Then I glued in the divider between the two first floor rooms, and the second floor. The house is currently being squashed under paint cans, much like last night…

Tomorrow I should be able to get the rest of the assembly finished, glue on my siding, and maybe even start painting. I repeat, I love this easy little house!

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