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Our verdict on The Player of Games: Iain M. Banks is still a master

The New 女生小视频 Book Club has just finished our December read, Iain M. Banks's sci-fi novel The Player of Games - and most of us were fans of this big-thinking Culture tale

By Alison Flood

2 January 2026

New 女生小视频. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

The Book Club has been reading Iain M. Banks’s The Player of Games

Colin McPherson/Corbis via Getty Images

The New 女生小视频 Book Club moved from the dystopian near-future imagined by Grace Chan in Every Version of You in November to the utopian far-future imagined by Iain M. Banks in The Player of Games for our December read 鈥 and it鈥檚 been quite the hit with members.

Set in the intergalactic civilisation of the Culture, The Player of Games follows the adventures and travails of Gurgeh, a master game player who is inveigled into taking on the barbaric Empire of Azad at its own game. Also known as Azad, this complex and all-pervasive game is so important to the people of Azad that the winner becomes emperor. Can Gurgeh possibly compete, when he鈥檚 only a beginner? What are the secrets that Azad and the Culture are hiding? This is a wrap-up of members鈥 thoughts on the book, so the answers to these questions, and multiple spoilers, will follow. Read on only if you鈥檙e done!

The first thing to say is that this wasn鈥檛 a first read for many of us: 36 per cent of members, including me, said they鈥檇 already read this particular Banks novel. And lots of us are big fans of Banks, and are still mourning the fact that there are no new novels 鈥 sci-fi or literary 鈥 to come from this wonderful writer. 鈥淥h, I still miss Iain. I’ve never read his last book, The Quarry, as after that there will be no new ones to read. I guess it’s about time now, I’m getting to the age where I might never read it!鈥 writes Paul Oldroyd on our group. 鈥淪ame here – I鈥檝e never finished The Hydrogen Sonata!鈥 adds Emma Weisblatt.

I think I鈥檝e read most of Banks鈥檚 books, although not for years. The Player of Games was one of my first, so, given my terrible memory, I came to it fairly fresh. I found it an absolute delight 鈥 I鈥檓 sure there is lots going on behind the scenes, but Banks gives the air of effortless brilliance to the reader. His touch is so light, so naturally funny. (I adored, for example, the small detail of the 鈥減roto-sentient Styglian enumerator鈥, an animal that counts everything it sees. It starts by counting people, of which there are 23. 鈥淭hen it began counting articles of furniture, after which it concentrated on legs.鈥)

But there is also so much to think about, from the nature of life in a utopia where there are no challenges left, to what it means to be a human in a universe where vast Minds take charge of everything. And that鈥檚 not to mention the joys of the plot 鈥 I was almost shouting at the page when Gurgeh was tempted into cheating at the game of Stricken by Mawhrin-Skel, and I was utterly swept up in the Azad games. This was a real win for me, and I鈥檓 going to go back and reread lots of other Iain M. Banks as a post-Christmas treat.

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One aspect of the book that I thought Banks handled particularly well was the actual games Gurgeh plays. It鈥檚 not easy to invent a futuristic game and have it ring true, and I felt he nailed this, giving us enough details about Azad (and other games) for them to seem real, but not getting bogged down in the nitty-gritty. This was definitely an aspect that also interested members. 鈥淭he game [Azad] was a representation, an encapsulation if you will, of the empire,鈥 says Elaine Li. 鈥淢ore generally it was probably a critique of Cold War politics.鈥

Judith Lazell wasn鈥檛 so sure 鈥 鈥淚 just took them at face value, I鈥檓 afraid,鈥 she says. Niall Leighton points out quite how deep this idea of game-playing goes in the book. 鈥淎nd then, not least, is the game in which Gurgeh is a pawn being played by the narrator, in a game with no rules, in which ends justify the means, whose rounds last decades, whose moves we are left to guess at just as much as we are in the other games, and in which there may indeed be no ends.鈥 Indeed!

A small aside: when I spoke to Banks鈥檚 friend and fellow sci-fi writer Ken MacLeod, Ken told me proudly that it was actually him who came up with the book鈥檚 final title. Banks had wanted to call it The Game Player. I think The Player of Games is much better!

Now, to what we thought of Gurgeh as a character. 鈥淕urgeh would not be a very nice person if he had not been bought up in the culture – he’s a bit of a creep, a bit self-obsessed. I hope he learned something from his adventures,鈥 says Matthew Campbell by email. I鈥檓 not sure we鈥檙e meant to like him, particularly 鈥 he鈥檚 a disaffected, arrogant cheat, after all 鈥 but I definitely found myself rooting for him as the story progressed.

Steve Swan, however, wasn鈥檛 as grabbed by the narrative. He put the book aside 鈥渁t the point [Gurgeh] was being roughed up鈥 鈥 I鈥檓 assuming this was when Mawhrin-Skel meets him on his way home. 鈥淐lever people, especially those who think they are, can make the biggest mistakes,鈥 says Steve. 鈥淕urgeh should have seen past the [drone鈥檚] ruse, but his arrogance and personal desires got in the way. What’s that old saying? – he made his bed and had to lay in it. No sympathy from me I am afraid!鈥 Steve felt that Gurgeh fell for Mawhrin-Skel鈥檚 manipulation too easily, and it 鈥渃aused the disbelief I had set aside to crumble鈥.

Niall has a different take on why Gurgeh makes his fateful decision to cheat. 鈥淭he way I read this passage was that his mind was being tampered with by Mawhrin-Skel using its effectors. It wasn’t his free will. It was the drone influencing him to the point where he could think he’d made the decision himself,鈥 says Niall. 鈥淗e’s manipulated by Special Circumstances from start to finish. To me, Gurgeh is not the titular player. He’s being played.鈥 While I think that鈥檚 definitely true overall, I saw Gurgeh鈥檚 cheating as a very human response to temptation, rather than another manipulation鈥 but I鈥檓 going to have to check out this section again, as it鈥檚 an interesting supposition.

While Paul Jonas didn鈥檛 find Gurgeh the game player 鈥渁s engaging as the mercenary role in Consider Phlebas or Use of Weapons鈥, he did think the set-up with the drone was 鈥渇airly credible and tempting for a top 鈥榮portsman鈥欌. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all part of the hero avoiding the call to adventure for a while. After all, why would Gurgeh throw up all his security and comfort without a little nudge?鈥

Our sci-fi columnist Emily H. Wilson had tipped The Player of Games as a good way into the work of Iain M. Banks, and after this reread I definitely agree. We鈥檙e gradually introduced to the universe of the Culture, not with a huge dump of exposition, but with small details about drones and Ships and Orbitals and the like.

We get to slowly understand that this is a post-scarcity civilisation where (almost) anything goes. I loved Gurgeh鈥檚 conversation with Hamin, an Azadian elder, on this topic. Hamin can鈥檛 understand why there is almost no crime, and almost nothing is forbidden, in the Culture 鈥 and he鈥檚 told about slap-drones, which are employed in the event of a murder. What does it do? 鈥淔ollows you around and makes sure you never do it again,鈥 says Gurgeh. Is that all, asks Hamin? 鈥淲hat more do you want? Social death, Hamin; you don鈥檛 get invited to too many parties.鈥

Paul Jonas already had an idea of the utopian worlds of the Culture when he picked up The Player of Games. 鈥淸It] builds that world again very subtly by following Gurgeh and his boredom and lack of challenge. Anyone who wants a house like his on a rainy mountain can have one. The drones are introduced just as personalities and Ai鈥檚 in their own right. We are re introduced to 鈥楥ontact鈥, the Culture鈥檚 service that manages contact with other civilisations and is also its military and intelligence service,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 so great to call it 鈥楥ontact鈥 rather than ministry for defence or war! So humanitarian. So utopian. But as Adam Roberts says, utopias are difficult to write as they become boring, just as Gurgeh has become bored by his life. The Culture鈥檚 challenge is to spread their utopianism to other cultures by essentially subtly interfering in their societies.鈥

Some of our members have been digging into what it might mean to live in a utopia. 鈥淕urgeh is an individualist living in a utopia of individualists where the collective work is mostly done by Minds and drones and sentient spaceships,鈥 ponders Paul. 鈥淕urgeh never seems to work in a team of other humans.鈥

Niall points out that Gurgeh might be 鈥渙dious鈥, but he is a product of his anarchist society, and Banks is out to examine 鈥渢he boundary between individualist anarchism and collectivist anarchism鈥.

鈥淕urgeh’s clearly an individualist, and I reject individualist anarchist philosophies in part because they’re an excuse for behaving like Gurgeh,鈥 says Niall. 鈥淥ne of the Culture’s problems is that there’s nothing to engage its human people. It’s also static, which doesn’t help, and the consequence is a predictable ennui. It’s perhaps worth flagging up that this book was written before Octavia Butler placed the importance of change in a utopia at the forefront of her thinking, but it’s been thought about at least since H. G. Wells.鈥

For Matthew Campbell, it is only the Culture ambassador to Azad, Shohobohaum Za, who seems 鈥渢o be really vitally alive and enjoying life鈥. 鈥淚n contrast, Gurgeh and the Azadians are each stuck in their own small worlds, each in their own way,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he confrontation between [Azadian emperor] Nicosar and Gurgeh towards the end sums it up (and presciently echoes political debates today – sorry not sorry if you are a MAGA conservative) – one angrily passionate about his empire but seeing it only from a very narrow selfish perspective, and knowing that it is all doomed;聽the other having no strongly articulated beliefs at all, unable to muster a defence of his utopia, he’s never had to think about it.鈥

There鈥檚 a lot more we could all say about the Culture and The Player of Games, and if you want to continue the discussion, do join members over on .

It鈥檚 time, meanwhile, to move onto our first read of 2026: January鈥檚 book club pick and winner of the Arthur C. Clarke award for science fiction in 2025, Sierra Greer鈥檚 . This is told from the perspective of Annie, who is a sex robot. She is owned by a not-very-nice man, and this novel does go to some dark places. But as chair of judges for the Clarke award, Andrew Butler, said when announcing its , it鈥檚 鈥渁 tightly-focused first person account of a robot designed to be the perfect companion who struggles to become free鈥. You can try a taster with an extract from the opening here and a piece by Sierra Greer on what it was like to write from the perspective of a sex robot here. And here鈥檚 Emily H. Wilson鈥檚 review 鈥 she really liked it.

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