Sir Reimund’s Tale, Chapter 3 — Hunting

February 18th, 2011 by Ryk Perry

Sir Reimund’s Tale continues on Fiction Friday here at Robot Viking. In Chapter 2 — Homecoming, Sir Reimund returned to his family estate to find it vexed by raiders, possibly giants. Bent on vengeance for his brother’s death and hoping for a permanent claim to his family’s holdings, the landless knight learns that Norse raiders [...]

Sir Reimund’s Tale, Chapter 2 — Homecoming

December 17th, 2010 by Ryk Perry

As a special Friday treat, Ryk Perry brings us the long-anticipated second chapter in the tale Sir Reimund, a landless knight who knows he has to fight for every scrap of coin and respect. When we last left Reimund, he’d won a battle against some mercenaries when a messenger arrived bearing news that Reimund’s brother [...]

Reaper Gets Deeper with Warlord Rising Novel

September 28th, 2010 by Ed Grabianowski

Reaper is well-known for their excellent miniatures and miniature wargames Warlord and CAV. Rules books have added bits of flavor to the universe that Warlord takes place in, but you can experience that world on a much deeper level with Warlord Rising, a novel by Michales Joy.

Sir Reimund’s Tale, Chapter 1 — The Robber Knight

September 16th, 2010 by Ryk Perry

We have a special edition of Robot Viking fiction today, as Ryk Perry details an incident in the life of an unlanded knight. Life as a knight wasn’t always glamor and glory (though it was a hell of a lot better than what the peasants got). This is the first part of a series, so [...]

Review: Weird Fiction from Desolation, U.S.A.

March 1st, 2010 by Ed Grabianowski

Marge Fulton offers up some taut tales set in Appalachia, while Jason Walters takes us on a tour of the bizarre in the Black Rock Desert.

More Jet Pack Fiction from Wood Ingham

December 4th, 2009 by Ed Grabianowski

Robot Viking comrade Wood Ingham and his fellow writers over at Jet Pack have been steadily filling the world with intense bursts of strange fiction, and Wood’s latest, “So I caught up with Dennis,” is no exception (though it is, to be sure, quite exceptional).