Avatar

NINE WORLDS GEEKFEST

@nine-worlds-geekfest / nine-worlds-geekfest.tumblr.com

Nine Worlds is a residential, multi-media, London-based convention celebrating all aspects of geek culture, and this is our Tumblr. Here be dragons. We tag Nine Worlds business: check it out for announcements, ways to get involved, requests for your feedback and thoughts, and lots more! See the main website for more info and tickets: this year, we're running August 8th-10th in London, and we hope you'll join us! A few of our tracks are on tumblr: All Of The Books Knitting LGBTQ+ (also, Starship Fabulous) Fanfic Comics Fandom This tumblr is run by brassfeathers. Enjoy!
Avatar
Avatar

Nine Worlds 2016 Venue

Thanks for bearing with us during the venue move this year, we’ve taken our time to make sure we got a suitable venue for Nine Worlds 2016

The exciting news is that The Novotel London West in Hammersmith will be our hosts, from 12th-14th August 2016.

We have accessibility info on our website. And notes on how to travel to the Novotel.

We've had productive face-to-face discussions with key staff responsible for hotel services, and we're looking forward to working with them to put on an awesome weekend. 

We like this venue, and think it’s better for Nine Worlds because:

  • A central London location is good for many (but not all) attendees.
  • We're confident about the hotel staffing
  • We've worked with the hotel staff to consider all aspects of the convention in detail, including food and drink.
  • The building layout is easy to navigate.
  • The transit areas (i.e. corridors and common spaces) are large enough for heavy traffic.
  • The content rooms, social spaces, and the expo hall all have lots of room. We've modelled capacity and expect a much more comfortable time.
  • There is an Expo hall for more vendors than ever before.

Hotel Rooms at the Novotel

We've agreed a convention booking rate at the Novotel. We will be sending out a booking link to existing ticket holders in the near future. Convention rates (per night) are:

  • Single occupancy £95
  • Double occupancy £105
  • Triple occupancy £115  (1 adult or 2 children using sofabed in all double rooms)

This rate includes free breakfast, is VAT-inclusive, and bookings are refundable until 72 hours prior to the event.

There are 8 Accessible rooms at the Novotel are included in the convention rate; and are on a first-come first-serve basis.

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
kierongillen

Immortality, Of A Kind.

The girl in the white suit hid her nerves behind the cigarette.

The curtains opened. A pale man in pressed flannel frowned.

“Who are you,” he said, rubbing sleep from his eyes, “and what the hell are you doing on my window-ledge?”

The girl balanced on her bare heels, rocking back and forth.

“I… am a fan,” she said, “Don’t worry. I’m perfectly safe.”

“I wasn’t worried,” he said, “Lose the cigarette.”

“Sorry,” she said. Her face twisted, as if her muscles used to make apologetic expressions had atrophied through neglect.

“I wanted to ask some advice,” she said as she flicked the cigarette into the void behind her.

The man thought of his breakfast cooling.

“Make it quick,” he sighed.

There was silence, or as close to silence as the rumble of the city far below would ever allow.

“I have so much I want to do, and so little time,” she said, “I want everything. Is that so much to ask? Everyone says so. Everyone says ‘be reasonable’. But then I look at you, and everything you’ve achieved, and know that 'reasonable’ is defeatist. Any one sliver of what you’ve done would be an enviable career. That it takes it all in, is an impossibility. There’s so little time, and so much work I want to do. I’m going to die but I want to be immortal. I’m trying so many things, but I’m afraid of losing myself in a–”

“Enough,” said the man, “I’ve two things for you. Listen carefully.”

“Always finish the album,” said the man, “and get the hell off my window ledge.”

The girl nodded.

“You were my inspiration,” she said, as she stepped backwards, turning to a shower of ash and sulphur, leaving tiny sooty footprints on the ledge.

The man sighed as he turned from the window. A girl dressed in a white suit, smoking, with that hair? And I was apparently inspiration? No shit.

Still – she was far from the first, and she’d be far from the last.

Immortality, of a kind.

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
aesthilia

A complete set of witches from Nine Worlds! Featuring myself as Granny Weatherwax, in addition to Nanny Ogg, Magrat, Agnes and Tiffany. I also saw a great Adorabelle Dearheart and apparently there was a Moist on the Friday.

Also I discovered that people get very excited if you offer them tiny bees (I had plenty left over after sticking them to my costume). 

Avatar
Avatar

After a long weekend of meeting lovely Runners, geeking out, accusing each other of being spies and waiting far too long at the bar, team Six to Start has returned to Earth from the Nine Worlds. And with us we have brought a recording of the Zombies, Run!: Tales from the Soundbooth panel session we did on Friday night. We had a hell of a lot of fun talking about all the work that goes into making the game, and we hope you enjoy hearing it. 

Note: This talk is entirely spoiler-free! There’s one exception, but we edited it out - you’ll hear more about that in the introduction. Listen away!

We’d like to give a massive, massive shoutout and love-bomb to zalia​, who organised and moderated this panel with superhuman patience, insight and grace. Big up! We can’t thank you enough, Zalia. 

Thanks also to the entire team at Nine Worlds, everyone who came to hear us witter on, and whoever was giving the audibly-hilarious talk in the room next door. 

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
such-heights

Nine Worlds Vidshow

Thursday: Vid Long and Prosper - Laid-back Star Trek fanvid fun Never Fade Away by jesuit24 (TOS/Reboot) The Long Spearby jmtorres, niqaeli et al (all) I Just Can’t Wait To Be King by some_stars (Reboot) Telephone by bleeding_muse (Enterprise) This Will Always Be My Home by ManticoreEscapee (DS9) This Is Everything by silver_sandals (all) Kamikaze by wildberry (DS9) Resistance by rhivolution (TNG) Born Too Late by bironic Apple Candy by talitha78 (Reboot) Machine by cosmic_llin (Voyager) Grapevine Fires by skywaterblue (all) Dante’s Prayer by killabeez we came to learn the sea by raven (all) I Wish I Was James Bond by kuwdora (DS9) Fascinating (TOS) Everybody by kuwdora (all) Tik Tok by MissSheenie (TOS) If You’re The Captain (Voyager) Long Live by cosmic_llin (all) Friday: Fanvid Showing - Amy returns with a roundup of the year’s fanvids VidUKon 2015 Intro by m_a_r_i_k_s You’re My Mission by meivocis (MCU, Captain America: the Winter Soldier) Take Me To Church by lithiumdoll (Person of Interest) Through the Deep Dark Woods by anoel (How to Get Away With Murder) Never Look Away by frayadjacent (Buffy) Wasteland by amnisias (Grantchester) Blue/Pink by beccatoria (Steven Universe) Repetition by thuviaptarth (MCU, Iron Man) Weapon of Choice by shinyjenni (Multifandom) Elastic Heart by jocarthage (Mad Max: Fury Road) Walking 2 Hawaii by isagel (MCU, Guardians of the Galaxy) Singing Hallelujah by leanwellback (Singin’ in the Rain) This Is What It Feels Like by sdwolfpup (Selfie) Fly by such_heights (Multifandom) Afterlife by sanguinity (The Middleman) Gone Tech by blithesea (Almost Human) Dynamite by elipie (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) Help! by purplefringe (Sleepy Hollow) Let Yourself Go by Andraste (Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries) Workin’ It by brokenmnemonic (Magic Mike) Kinky Neighbours by thingswithwings (Batman 1966) If you enjoyed watching those vidshows at the con, you might want to come along to Vidukon next summer! A cosy weekend convention in Cardiff where we sit and watch lots of vidshows interspersed with interesting panels and fannish hangouts. Lots of non-vidders attend, although some people do find themselves picking it up afterwards!

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
fthgurdy

You know what? Let’s talk about Furiosa and the many ways in which she is an awesome alternative female representative in media.

She’s shown as human- fully so. Exhibits a full range of emotions, anger and despair and determination and pain and soft joy and caring and everyfuckingthing without once being shamed for it.

That could really be it, but hey, I’m gonna keep going.

It seems ironic to frame this next quality by bringing a male presence into the picture, but that’s another reason she’s badass- nothing she does is in deference to a man. Not a thing. She doesn’t define herself as opposed to or as submissive to or as superior or as antagonistic to men. Not even to the male lead of the film. She has a purpose of survival, redemption, escape, rescue. The fact that the assholes she has to mow down in order to reach it are all men is just the sad reality.

And accordingly, the film doesn’t ever take men into account when describing her.

She’s not sexualised. Not once. There isn’t a single moment in that film where ‘sexy’ is even considered with her, because it’s a pretty fucking irrelevant concern when you’re trying to escape through the desert in a huge truck while hordes of suicidal cultists chase you down.

Her appearance, gear, clothes, behaviour are all practical. The logic of her character is not hindered by attempts to make her look hot.

She isn’t softened to make Max look tougher. She isn’t softened to make sure Max doesn’t look inferior to her. Nothing is done to her to serve Max’s representation of masculinity. 

She isn’t softened to make sure audiences will remember she’s female. She isn’t held to any sexist standards of what femininity should be like.

She isn’t contrasted with the other women in terms of femininity. She’s different than they are, but it is not a judgement of her value as a woman, of the accuracy of her femininity, or of theirs.

She makes no excuses, no apologies, she doesn’t take any time to reassure the audience that she’s a woman, a human being, a complete person with flaws and qualities who needs to be seen as an individual, not as part of an idea about gender. Someone who has the right to exist exactly as she is. If we can’t see it, it’s our problem.

(and it is terrifying me how many of these points simply boil down to ‘the priority when creating her was not whether het men would enjoy her’. The line between a good female character and a bad one is that easy to cross.) —-

N.B. : the standards of the camera and the message the film sends to the audience and the standards set by Immortan (who is the villain, remember) are two entirely different things. Joe certainly does set down rules for what a woman must be, but Furiosa, the Five and the Vuvalini refuse to play his game. The film supports them, not him.

Avatar
yohunny

And another thing that was oh so good was that the final arc was about her fight. No bullshit excuse that forced her to take a back seat during the final act.

I’ve seen so many movies that do it wrong. The one that comes to mind is the Mummy 3 (sorry for picking a bad example, but this pissed me off so much that it is literally the only thing I remember about the Mummy 3.) In the movie you have Lin, a badass immortal assassin who (together with her immortal mother) has guarded the tomb of the evil Dragon Emperor for thousands of years. The Dragon Emperor is revived, mortally wounds her mother. Her mother’s dying wish is for Lin to kill the emperor.

Long story short, this badass assassin is reduced to a prop in the final battle. Rick O’Connell and his son Alex kills the Emperor, because of course they do, and “the now-mortal Lin settled with Alex.” (Actual quote from the Wiki.) This made me so MAD when I was watching it. She had guarded that guy for MILLENNIA and he killed both her parents, hell yes it was personal, she had the training and the skills required to defeat him… and in the end she didn’t get her revenge because two schmucks stumbled into her plot and killed the guy for her. Weak.

I’m so glad the final battle was about Furiosa’s fight for redemption. She was the one who got grievously injured (while saving Max’s life), the one who made the heroic sacrifice (and Nux, of course) while Max provided backup and then got to be the healer at the end. I guess i don’t have to tell you how often I’ve seen it the other way around (the man makes a heroic sacrifice but is healed by the woman, like the Matrix).

Just imagine the roles being swapped around, with Max making the heroic sacrifice and going after the Immortan… oh my god. Mummy 3 all over again. He’d be like “Remember me?” and Immortan would be: “…sorry, who’re you?” Zero impact.

Oh, but she could have been put in the back seat much earlier, as soon as Max arrived and got that mask off. That happens way too often, and the excuse is that he’s the hero, right? It’s his movie, right? He’s the dude, road warrior super skilled badass hardened survivor so he’s gonna default to be the leader, right? He’s from the outside so he’s gonna bring these people enlightenment and knowledge and help them like only a hero can! Thank goodness for Max!

And this is where Miller goes pfftftfttftftftfttfftft. :D

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
erinptah

Night Vale Gems fusion of Sandstone (Tamika Flynn) and Janice! Co-starring a couple of fully-human Girl Scouts. Janice comes from a family of feldspar varieties (Cecil = moonstone, Abby = amazonstone). So of course she and Tamika form arkose, a variety of sandstone that’s at least 25% feldspar. If Janice had full-size legs, their fusion would have a couple of extra calves (like Sugilite with her doubled forearms). As-is, Arkose winds up with two proportional legs, and extra eyes. And seeeerious muscle.

_____

Avatar
Avatar
“I die in Iron Man,” says Sayed Badreya, an Egyptian man with a salt-and-pepper beard. “I die in Executive Decision. I get shot at by—what’s his name?—Kurt Russell. I get shot by everyone. George Clooney kills me in Three Kings. Arnold blows me up in True Lies…” As Sayed and Waleed and the others describe their various demises, it strikes me that the key to making a living in Hollywood if you’re Muslim is to be good at dying. If you’re a Middle Eastern actor and you can die with charisma, there is no shortage of work for you. […] “Were you doing all that boozing because you felt guilty for playing terrorists?” I ask [Ahmed]. “There was an element of that,” he replies. “There was an element of not working between those parts. And then I had an epiphany. I called my agent: ‘Hey! Don’t send me out on these terrorist parts anymore. I’ll be open for anything else, but not the terrorist stuff.’ ” Ahmed pauses. “After that, she never called.” “How often did she call before then?” I ask him. “Oh, three or four times a week.”
Avatar
Avatar
…So there is a demand [for femslash] here. And it’s not simply “queer” women wanting to see queer women. Women in general want to see more stories about women. They want more stories about women being unapologetically sexual. Women have proven we like independent female narratives. We’ve proven we want to read/see/watch stuff about women, and that we can make media succeed without men involved. And if the fact that the “romance” (erotica) genre has been the biggest market in fiction for decades tells us anything, it’s that women have an appetite for porn… Femslash combines these things. …Women want to have stories that remind us that we can exist for ourselves and for each other, not for some dude.
Avatar
Avatar
The actress who played Lt Uhura in Star Trek is to blast off on a mission for US space agency NASA aged 82 - and three months after suffering a stroke.
Nichelle Nichols, who has been an ambassador for NASA since portraying the groundbreaking character in the 1960s, will fly on the SOFIA space telescope in September.
While the telescope - housed in a specially converted Boeing 747 - doesn’t quite go to the final frontier, it makes it as high as the stratosphere, around 50,000 above the Earth.
Ms Nichols revealed her daring mission during an ‘Ask Me Anything’ session on social forum website Reddit.
Source: mirror.co.uk
Avatar
Avatar

furiosa vs. tropes for women in action

Mad Max: Fury Road has already inspired some of the most intense fandom I’ve seen, and been part of, in years. I think it’s partially due to the sheer intensity of the sensory and emotional experience the movie delivers. But let’s be honest. A lot of it is due to Furiosa.

The character has already inspired an outpouring of fan art and cosplay. Even among movie fans who aren’t part of those scenes, people who love her REALLY love her. (And I wholeheartedly include myself in this category.) I can’t remember the last time that multiple, grown-ass adults on my Facebook feed had profile pictures referencing a movie character. Several of them–men and women–have this one:

Why has Furiosa inspired so much passion? I think a lot of it has to do with the way she blows a giant flaming hole in the standard images for women in action films.

While recent years have given us some fantastic action heroines, they tend to be confined within a few set tropes, with remarkably little variation.

Of course, by far the most common trope for women in action is still to be the person being rescued–to be the prize the protagonist, usually a man, gets at the end of the journey. There are whole franchises built around this concept. I think we can all agree that’s boring and not worthy of a blog post.

But even among women characters who have agency in action movies–as protagonists or as villains–there are still some basic patterns that recur again and again. In particular, there are three basic templates that a large majority of female action characters fall into. The point is not that these tropes, in and of themselves, are wrong. It’s that they’re often all there is.

1. The Girl Hero

This is the default trope for YA. Katniss in The Hunger Games, Tris in Divergent…you’ve seen it many times.

Katniss Everdeen, The Hunger Games

The Girl Hero is virginal (often unusually non-sexual for a teenager). She’s usually small or skinny, sometimes for a logical reason (Katniss grew up starving), sometimes not so much. She seems like an underdog, but proves to be surprisingly good at violence and/or have some unique skill, and through her bravery and grit takes on foes much bigger than she is.

Tris, Divergent

It should be said that plenty of male YA characters share these characteristics–Harry Potter is also small and skinny, a novice in the world of magic, but unusually skilled at a few things. He doesn’t win his battles through physical strength, but through cleverness and bravery. And there’s an understandable appeal in having a scrawny underdog, of any gender, turn out to be a hero, especially in a book or movie geared toward young people. But with a few exceptions (see: Tamora Pierce) the Girl Hero with these qualities is THE template for young women in action/fantasy/sci-fi/speculative fiction, with not a lot of variation.

2. The Sexpot

When the Girl Hero grows up, she can be properly objectified as a different trope, the Sexpot.

Lara Croft: poster girl for this trope

You’ve all seen this trope in the many, many superhero and comic book movies that are currently squirting out of the studio pipeline. She’s that one token woman on the team with four guys.

Yeah, that one.

The Sexpot gets to fight–and sometimes even gets artfully bloody and dirty–but she has to do it in a latex suit and while appearing cool and sleek and having a good hair day. (She has long hair, so she can flip it, and so we’re extra sure she’s a girl.) Her fight style is extra bendy and flippy and maybe when we break out the slow motion. She may use her sexiness as a weapon (a la Black Widow) or it may be just a bonus quality. She can be powerful, but only if we can look at her conventionally attractive body move around in tight clothing while it’s happening.

3. The Ice Queen

The Ice Queen is almost always the trope for female villains. She sits at the top of some kind of power structure–a state or a criminal enterprise–issuing commands to her minions but rarely doing the violence herself. She’s probably got a sharp suit or a uniform and a severe haircut. 

Delacourt, the villain of Elysium.

She’s allowed to be older than 35.

President Coin, Mockingjay

The Ice Queen has institutional power but rarely fights; physicality is the low pursuit of men in her world. She may be smart, crafty and manipulative, but she will not punch you in the face. She’ll snap her fingers and get someone else to do it, although she may sit on the edge of her desk to watch.

Jeanine, the villain of Divergent

Maya, Zero Dark Thirty–an Ice Queen protagonist, sort of

The point here is not that there’s no variation on these themes. But it’s striking how often the women that do exist in the thriller, action, sci-fi and speculative fiction film universe fall into one of these three boxes. Which is why any character who doesn’t map onto one of these templates is so exciting.

Here’s Furiosa.

She fights a hell of a lot. She does not flip her hair.

She’s intensely physical, but you never get the sense that her fights are choreographed to perform her sexuality for you. They’re choreographed for her to fucking win.

When Max shows up, they have a knock-down, drag-out fight with each other. Max doesn’t pull any punches. Why? Because he makes no assumptions that she’d be less lethal to him than a man. They beat the shit out of each other in a big, messy, grunty, scrabbly fight.

For significant portions of the movie, Furiosa is driving a truck, which means she’s essentially acting from the biceps up. You literally cannot look at her boobs. You have to look at her face.

She gets to be dirty. Really really dirty. This picture alone highlights how weird it is that all the other women above are so clean.

She gets to be ugly and make weird faces in the middle of fighting.

She gets to yell and be angry the way one might be in the middle of a nonstop road battle when you’re full of adrenaline because you’re fighting for your life.

In short, she gets to look like an actual person who is actually fighting, instead of a statue that can do a back walkover with the help of a wire rig.

So it’s hardly surprising that she’s racked up a lot of fans. She takes all the images of clean, pretty, carefully sexualized women we’re used to seeing, even in action, rips them to shreds, sets them on fire and then drives over them with an 18-wheeler.

This is all even more remarkable given that Furiosa is played by an actress who is very feminine-presenting in her everyday life. Charlize Theron is one of the very few actress who’s been allowed to pick roles where she radically changes her gender presentation.

Here she is in Aeon Flux, playing about the most Sexpot-y character imaginable:

Here she is in Monster:

I think there are a lot more actresses out there who could take on these kinds of transformations, radically altering the way they look, move, and perform their gender, the way male stars do all the time. But the equivalent depth and diversity of roles for women just doesn’t exist in Hollywood right now.

Furiosa’s popularity shows how starved we are for images of women who are actually powerful and physical in the same ways that men get to be in blockbuster after blockbuster after blockbuster. It’s not that all the images of women in action have to look like this–it’s just that we hardly ever see a female fighter who looks this way. Furiosa reminds us that there is so much more out there than we’re getting in terms of what women can do and look like on screen.

I love everything about this analysis and it makes me reflect and realize this re how they present Furiosa:

From the very first shot of her all the way until her brawl with Max, we only see her face, her eyes in particular. The intensity in them is fucking breathtaking– haunting, scathing, lethal, broken, all at once. (A. O. Scott perfectly names it a “thousand-mile stare.”) So, absolutely, we don’t see her body, or anything distinctly female. There will be no gazes wandering to her chest or curves. We’re forced to look her in the eyes and accord her respect.

Avatar
Avatar

“is this feminist? is this not feminist”

I feel like we’ve kind of surpassed this type of question. This discussion is reductive in the vast field of media critique, since firstly Your Feminism Is Not Everyone’s Feminism and additionally a thing is totally capable of being good with regard to feminism in one way but shitty in others.

The recent Mad Max film! Great for focusing on many women, mostly women, and focusing on sex slavery without explicitly throwing shock value images of rape in our face. Kind of shitty for it’s gross depictions of villains all with birth defects and illnesses and ~grotesque~ disfigurements.

Pacific Rim! Excellent for Mako and her narrative and a location that ISN’T the US. Kind of sucks how most of the cast is STILL white and the only other woman in it gets like two lines.

Whether or not a thing can be labeled under feminist so it’s okay to enjoy it is no longer the best way to have discussions on the progressiveness or racism/ableism/sexism/classism/etc of a piece of media.

how about the question “how is this empowering and how is this harmful?”

Avatar
iokheaira

I think this is a much more useful question, because no single work of art, whether it’s from the 1910s or the 2010s, can be purely good for everyone - but even an ambiguous or a “bad” work can have valuable aspects.

It’s common (especially common on Tumblr) for conversations about a movie etc. to default to a very black-and-white, dogmatic view, where Only One Interpretation Is Correct. And it mostly ends up with people feeling shitty for liking something, or feeling like they can’t criticise something other people deem Perfect, or like if they say anything positive about something genuinely problematic that means the’yre claiming it’s Perfect and that its negative aspects don’t matter.

I feel that shifting the discussion to the ways something is good or bad might help with making it more balanced - and allow people to both like and criticise things, because while nothing made by humans is perfect, humans can also find inspiration in the weirdest of places.

Avatar
tielan

How is this empowering and how is this harmful?”Yes. We need more nuance in our discussions.

I would add that we also need to be willing to LISTEN to each other. I get so sick of the “Well, *I* find this harmful, so you’re not allowed to find it empowering” attitude–and vice versa, “I find this empowering so you’re not allowed to find it harmful”–that happens so often in these conversations. Just changing the language we use to discuss it isn’t going to work if people still get so locked into their perspectives that they can’t or won’t hear anyone else’s.

Avatar
Avatar

a harry potter/x files au: when agent hermione granger (emma watson) is assigned to debunk agent luna lovegood’s (evanna lynch) project involving unexplained phenomena, both women and their boss assistant director minerva mcgonagall (maggie smith) find themselves in the middle of a deep-seated government conspiracy involving a mysterious, chain-smoking woman (helena bonham carter). 

Avatar
Avatar
Avatar
dirtyriver
Vanity Fair : How do you think social media—and specifically Tumblr—is responsible for the rise in female readership in the world of comic books? Noelle Stevenson : Well, you don’t want to walk into a place where you feel like people are telling you don’t belong there. So maybe you don’t go into a comics shop or a message board where it’s mostly comics chatter from male fans. For a lot of people that was a barrier. Tumblr was a place where, for once, it was a predominantly female crowd. And you could share comics visually, which is one of the strengths of the design of Tumblr. When I saw Thor, I couldn’t go to [comic-book Web site] Bleeding Cool and say, “Oh, let’s talk about Loki’s issues with being adopted.” But Tumblr was totally there to talk to me about that. Even for people who have been reading for years and years, they could find a crowd here where they were more accepted.

Noelle Stevenson interviewed by Joanna Robinson for Vanity Fair - How Noelle Stevenson Broke All the Rules to Conquer the Comic Book World (via dirtyriver)

Avatar
Avatar

Zombies, Run! at Nine Worlds London

Runner Five! Are you in London? Do you love ZR? Are you free next weekend (6th -9th August)? Why not come see Team Zombies, Run! at Nine Worlds London

A whole bunch of us will be in attendance, so do stop by and say hello if you’re there too! 

Highlights of the con for Zombies, Run! fans include:

“Tales from the Sound Booth”: a panel in which Adrian Hon (Six to Start CEO), Matt Wieteska (Six to Start Audio Director), Phil Nightingale (Voice of Sam Yao) and Jennifer Tan (Voice of Runner 4 and Nadia) will give you a peek behind the microphone and tell you exactly what goes into making your favourite missions. [Friday August 7th @ 8.30pm, Connaught A]

“In Conversation with Naomi Alderman”: An in-depth discussion with crying-while-running and most-representative-fitness-app-ever mastermind Zombies, Run! lead writer Naomi Alderman. Naomi will be discussing the challenges of writing fiction while identifying and tackling your internal biases. [Saturday August 8th @ 3.15, County A]

“This Geek Can”: Matt and Adrian join Superhero Workout writer Rachael Acks to discuss fitness for geeky feminists. [Friday August 7th @ 5pm, Connaught A]

We’re really excited about the weekend, so come on down to join the fun! If you’ll be attending, don’t forget to let us know on twitter (@zombiesrungame)! 

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.