Becoming a walking, dancing, fire-breathing lifestyle dragon is not something you can pursue overnight! It takes years of studying, living, and understanding the modern culture!
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think being a dragon would be pretty awesome... you get to fly.
'Dragon Age' needs to have big story moments. It is a game about character first, and the party is an absolutely central part of that. I want to keep pursuing interactivity with the world: taking crowds to the next level or having things catch fire because you indiscriminately cast a fireball into a wheat field.
I always wanted to ride a dragon myself, so I decided to do this for a year in my imagination.
I'm kind of honored to be a dragon lady. The dragon is a very powerful, mythical animal.
I'm the sort of person who, once I put dragons into the real world, feels obliged to think about how their presence would have changed history.
When I moved to Wales more than twenty years ago and began to research 'Here Be Dragons,' I was fascinated from the first by the Welsh medieval laws, by the discovery that women enjoyed a greater status in Wales than elsewhere in Europe.
I certainly hope 'Dragon' can leave some legacy behind.
I think when writers play with dragons, we are simply doing what fantasy writers have always done.
I couldn't enjoy 'A Dance With Dragons,' unfortunately. Of course, I enjoyed it, but it was the first of the books I read as a writer on 'Game of Thrones,' so all I could do is think, 'We're going to have to shift that,' 'We won't be able to afford that,' or 'That's a great scene.'
My mother is an immigrant from China, and she filled my head with stories about ghosts and fighting monks in China, so the world of 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' was a very familiar one.
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