As publishing becomes less profitable, more writers are jumping from books to video games to make a living

Being a writer is no walk in the park. But if there’s one thing that writers know how to do, it is how to make things work. For some prose writers in the UK, they’re making things work by moving into a different industry altogether: video games. 

A new feature from The Guardian examined the growing number of novelists in the UK who have embarked on careers in video game writing as a way to supplement their publishing income. The Guardian cites a 2022 report from the Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society that stated that pro authors in the UK earn an average of just £7,000 a year from writing, down from £10,497 a year in 2018, which was already down from £12,330 a year in 2007. That’s a 43% drop, not accounting for inflation. Adjusting for inflation, £12,330 from 2007 is worth £18,347.07 in 2022 British pounds! Yikes. 

The Guardian spoke with romance writer Mallory Marlowe, whose book Love and Other Conspiracies became an instant USA Today bestseller when it came out in 2024. Marlowe’s day job as a video game writer provides the financial stability that publishing doesn’t. “Thankfully, I have a consistent paycheck coming in,” Marlowe said, “which is an advantage because the payment structures in publishing aren’t exactly sustainable.”

Still, the video game industry has its own quirks. Writer Joe Dunthorne (author of Submarine, which was adapted into a great coming of age movie by Richard Ayoade) “did a huge amount of work on a big-budget video game that got cancelled without ever being publicly announced.” So while more and more British writers are making ends meet by hoping over to video games, who’s to say that we’ll ever see their work?



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