Check out Erfworld. It starts off as a webcomic, moves to narrative for the parts that are best done in a narrative style, and then jumps back to webcomic format for battles. It hits all of those marks you mention, as well as a standard that I hold personally. I think that rationalist fiction is at its most compelling when it creates a world with new rules, and sends the empiricist out to learn them. It’s easier to show how to learn things empirically when there’s still low-hanging-fruit to be plucked, and there have to be people in the story who don’t know things in order to show the advantages of knowledge.
One of the catchphrases that develops is, “We try things. Sometimes they even work.”
Check out Erfworld. It starts off as a webcomic, moves to narrative for the parts that are best done in a narrative style, and then jumps back to webcomic format for battles. It hits all of those marks you mention, as well as a standard that I hold personally. I think that rationalist fiction is at its most compelling when it creates a world with new rules, and sends the empiricist out to learn them. It’s easier to show how to learn things empirically when there’s still low-hanging-fruit to be plucked, and there have to be people in the story who don’t know things in order to show the advantages of knowledge.
One of the catchphrases that develops is, “We try things. Sometimes they even work.”
Discussed here