L.E. Torres
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luisto.bsky.social
L.E. Torres
@luisto.bsky.social
SFF Space Opera author, and role-playing game designer. First novels set in the Seven Worlds coming soon! #AmQuerying https://www.letorres.com
Argh, and precisely the day we have guests for dinner ☹️ Dusting off plans to sneak out the window 😉
August 18, 2025 at 9:53 PM
Haven't finished reading it, but my impression is that it doesn't go to the granular combat-moves detail that DW does (H&S, volley, defend, etc, plus playbooks' combat moves), is this correct? So is Grimwild's combat more summarized and less blow-by-blow than DW's?
February 14, 2025 at 2:44 AM
Authors, if you see this, it’s a sign to post the first line of your book (or book-in-progress).

"Really, I should stop punching people in zero-g."
February 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM
+1, buenísimo. 2300AD me parece uno de los mejores rulesets para SF realista. Suerte en la campaña!
January 8, 2025 at 3:04 PM
@karjedon.bsky.social se ve genial! Con qué reglas es? Expanse RPG? Traveler? Otro?
January 8, 2025 at 5:13 AM
13) Disclaimers: SF checkout patterns of Seattleites don’t prove correlation with anything. I don’t have industry insider knowledge, so don’t assume anything here makes sense. Thanks to the Seattle Public Library for making all this data open for us data geeks to play with! 🧵 ends.
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
12) Takeaways: Books in my genre published in 2023/24 averaged 199 checkouts/year by Seattleites. That’s ~12.6% of my baseline heavyweights', and ~4.5% of SF all-up heavyweights' (Dune). Thus, numbers skew towards well-known brands/series. And yet, the numbers also show every book has an audience!
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
11) Third, the adage about series sales somewhat halving between books is visible in Murderbot, as well as in The Blighted Stars+sequels, and in A Desolation Called Peace. I think this sucks, as taken together, these series tell GREAT stories! Dauntless+sequels dropped little between books, though.
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
10) Second, the best-performing book I read was James S.A. Corey’s The Mercy of Gods (which was released just four months ago!). I think this confirms the brand power of James S.A. Corey + The Expanse. 🚀
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
9) First, only one book series over performed the baseline: Martha Wells’ Murderbot. No surprise there, as that’s one cool series 😊
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
8) OK, I’m going to assume that people who read the space-SF books I read might be interested in reading the space-SF books I write. So, compared to my baseline, how do the SF books set in space I read fare? Here’s the data, insights follow below:
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
7) (Side note: In 2023/24 forty SF books were checked out more times than 1984. Really, people? Really??? 😠)
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
6) Here’s the top SF books chart, with my two reference points. Leviathan Wakes ranks 32, and A Memory Called Empire 46. These two modern classics’ TAM is therefore ~1400-1800 checkouts, or ~16-20% of that of a 1965 SF classic twice (thrice?) made into a movie (which is unfair to my references).
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
5) Thing is, though, I like SF set in space, dealing with complex, nuanced political and social issues. I’m therefore arbitrarily setting my two reference points as Leviathan Wakes and A Memory Called Empire (both of which I 💖). If Seattle’s SF TAM is 8700, what’s the TAM for my reference points?
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
4) What SF did Seattleites read in 2023/2024? Here’s the top ten list for Seattle Public Library checkouts. Some are duh!-obvious, some not so much. Interestingly, three are from this decade (orange). I’m assuming ~8700 checkouts (Dune) is the total addressable market (TAM) for SPL SF readers.
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
3) First, a general overview on formats: In 2023/24, 87% of all SF checkouts were in digital formats (ebook + audiobook). Perhaps signing physical books is on its way to not being a thing anymore?
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
2) Criteria: I included 1) novels (physical, ebook, audiobook; no graphic novels); 2) tagged for “Science Fiction”; 3) published between 2021-2024; 4) checked out in 2023 or 2024; 5) with no franchise tie-ins (mostly Star Wars / Star Trek books); 6) and nothing tagged “juvenile” (so adult SF only).
December 30, 2024 at 9:33 PM
Oops, clarifying that the above is not a ranking; the books are in the chronological order in which I read them.
December 25, 2024 at 4:51 AM
Admito que soy más fan de 13th Age que de D&D, y de acuerdo en que es cierto que es para una audiencia bien particular. A mis jugadores les encantan las jugadas locas como la del swashbuckler (que uno de mis jugadores usa todo el tiempo)...
October 23, 2024 at 9:20 PM