Earlier this month, a report came out stating that Amazonâs upcoming Mass Effect TV show was undergoing rewrites to appeal to, as The Ankler put it, ânon-gamers.â There wasnât much context given in the story, but fans took this to mean that Amazonâs adaptation of BioWareâs science fiction epic might deviate from the source material in ways that might not feel true to the RPGs. But now, the co-showrunner on the series has disputed that this demand has come from on high.
In a Bluesky post, writer and executive producer Daniel Casey said that while he couldnât talk specifics about what he was working on because heâd signed an NDA, he had been caught off-guard by the ânon-gamersâ quote when the Ankler story went out, as that has âat no pointâ been said to him.
So, I canât talk about the specifics of what Iâm writing (Iâve signed NDAs, etc) â but for whatever itâs worth, that article by the Ankler caught me off guard just as much as you. I donât know where that ânon-gaming audiencesâ quote came from or who said it, but at no point has that been said to me.
At this point, we still know very little about the Mass Effect show beyond the fact that it will apparently take place after the original trilogy, and wonât follow the gameâs protagonist, Commander Shepard. This is probably the right call, because no one wants to see a flattened version of Shepardâs story that crystallizes the gamesâ choice-driven narrative, which can go down many different paths, into one specific thread. However, if it is going to take place after the original trilogy, it will have to contend with Mass Effect 3âs divergent endings, and I donât envy the writers that task.Â
A fifth Mass Effect game is in the works at BioWare following a restructuring that led to a massive downsizing at the company. We know it will take place sometime after Mass Effect: Andromeda, and will involve both the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies in some way.