The Chris Voss Show - The Chris Voss Show Podcast – The Entity Game by Jimmie D Robinson
Episode Date: June 20, 2026The Entity Game by Jimmie D Robinson https://www.amazon.com/Entity-Game-Jimmie-D-Robinson/dp/B0GYMMB7TJ The Entity Game by Jimmie D. Robinson is a thrilling blend of science fiction, action, and ...historical warfare that spans centuries—and galaxies. In the year 2129, an elite team of Space Defenders uncovers a mysterious metallic vault buried deep within a distant alien pyramid. But they are not alone. Rival alien forces wage a brutal battle to claim the powerful object, triggering a chain of events that unleashes twelve enigmatic energy beings—ancient entities with unimaginable intelligence and purpose. These entities are not mere observers—they are players. Diving into the minds and ancestral memories of humanity, they select warriors from different eras—Vikings, Zulus, ninjas, soldiers, and more—to represent them in a high-stakes, interdimensional “game.” Each faction brings its own brutal history, strategy, and instinct for survival into a contest where the rules are unclear and the consequences are deadly. As past and future collide, and as humanity becomes an unwitting pawn in a cosmic competition, one question remains: Who will control the game… and what happens to those who lose? Packed with intense battles, imaginative world-building, and a unique fusion of history and sci-fi, The Entity Game delivers a gripping adventure that challenges the limits of time, power, and destiny.
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Today we have an amazing young man on the show.
We're going to get into his book and talk about his works.
He's done a lot of books and has been writing since his childhood.
His book is entitled The Entity Game by Jimmy D. Robinson.
We're going to get into this book here that he has and talk about some of his other works.
He grew up on the west side of Chicago.
At age 16, his family moved to the south side of Chicago.
During the 60s, the 70s, he saw many gang fights and police brutality.
He enjoys reading, adventure.
historical and science fiction novels.
His favorite authors are Frederick Forsyth, Stephen King, and Alex Haley.
His favorite kinds of movies are Western martial arts and science fiction.
Sergio Leone and Bruce Lee are the best.
I would agree.
Those what they call those spaghetti westerns.
Sergio Leone was a good, bad and ugly,
and they used to call him spaghetti westerns because he was Italian.
The best television shows are the original Star Trek and Outer Limits series.
I'll let you argue with everyone on that one.
He listens intently to jazz, R&B, soul, and classic rock music.
He gravitates to open-minded people who don't judge or stereotype of the people.
Welcome to the show, sir. How are you?
Everything's okay. How you doing?
Everything's okay, Jimmy.
Awesome sauce, man.
Give us dot-coms.
Where do you want people to find you in the interwebs of the sky?
Where do I find me in?
Atlema.com.
Yep.
Interwebs, social media.
That.
Oh, what you should say on Amazon.
I'm on Amazon.
on Amazon.
Yeah, there it is.
I think I'm on TikTok too.
Okay.
And do you know your Tick-Hoc handle off the top of your head?
Huh?
Do you know your TikTok name handle?
No, I'll have to look it up.
Okay.
If you send it over, we'll put it on the Chris Vos show,
but we'll have a link to your Amazon book on the show.
People will find it.
Okay, thank you.
That's the best thing I have to do it.
Right.
Okay.
So, Jimmy, go ahead and give us the 30,000 overview.
What's aside your book, sir?
Okay.
The book is the entity game.
It's the future science fiction space explanation is two, three groups in space trying to get to this metallic vault on this planet.
It has a lot of energy.
And it's an unknown energy source, but they have to get to it.
The intelligent apes, they want it for their power.
The humans want it for their power.
another group called the Crohnians, they want who they're all battling for it.
When the vault blast open, energy come out, but not like they think.
And it knocks everybody out on the planet, all the males.
The group that's in the energy source, they strive on male testosterone.
The male testosterone gives some energy and it excites them.
They love it.
It's like food to them.
So they go through each of the men on the planet that been knocked out to their ancestors.
The ancestors are Vikings, Zulus, Western outlaws, ninjas, and they bring the best to this planet from the plant, from the past, so they can all battle each group.
And the entities enjoy the testosterone during the battles.
Now, like I say, they all.
take away sports, anything, there's guns, et cetera.
It's going to be man-to-man combat.
And then whatever group wins, they got a prize.
The prize is thousands of beautiful women, naked women, whatever, that's to their disposal.
Wow.
Yeah.
But the other people I had when I was a teenager.
Yeah.
And then see, I was thinking about when I used to write things, how most men,
Prize is women.
Yep.
And also, another prize is they'll go back to their time period or planet with over a billion dollars worth of whatever currency they want.
Gold, diamonds, silver, if it's paper dollars, whatever it is, over a billion dollars.
So they're going to go back as a king, billion win.
But they got to win this battle.
There's a 50 group in each battle.
It ain't going to be no advantage of all you got guns, you got knives and whatnot.
It's hand to hand.
And with all that going, it's going to battle up.
Now, another thing, it ain't going to just take place about it.
My book will show each group what they are about, the philosophy, how they feel about life, etc.
It won't be no long, drawn-out thing to give you a basic idea what each group is about.
In general, no, so I give them a better idea.
So like I say, it's Western outlaws, it's some Indians, it's some Chinese monks, Vikings, many, many more.
And so when the battle starts, it was going on.
Now it's a subplot about some female people that the entities are paying no attention to because they have very little testosterone.
But the female groups is going to save the main characters because they're going to take advantage of,
the idea that the entities and paying them no attention.
The female group that's on the spaceship, they're paying attention and you know how to work
of control.
They're more intelligent than these entities realize.
And they don't know.
Yeah.
Is there any way we could get some quiet in the background?
We're hearing people and phones.
Hey, Terry, y'all got to be quiet.
They hear you.
We get it off.
It's okay.
Yeah.
Thank you, Jimmy.
We just want to give you a great show.
and people interrupt you.
So now this is set in year 21, 29.
Yeah, I'll figure that's pretty good.
Elite team is space defenders.
Yes.
100 years from now?
Is that 100 years from now?
I'm getting tired and old, I guess.
I think it's 103 years from now.
Yes.
This is going to take place.
And now, do you have a protagonist, a main character by chance,
or is it spread out among all the different space defenders?
Okay.
I'm glad you asked that.
The main protagonist is the captain,
really, the federal face defenders,
they are the main protagonist.
But another group,
they closely protagonists,
but they got some attitudes,
and that's the space marines.
That's the space marines.
They always got attitudes,
those marine guys.
Yeah, but they, along with the federal space defenders,
so they're protagonists,
but you know how,
And I got the idea from Sergio Leone because the good guys almost bad as bad guys, et cetera.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And what gave you the idea for this book?
What was the inspiration?
Okay.
I'm so glad you asked that.
Every since I was real young, me and my brother and a few other people, not many, used to love to see ideas of groups against groups.
Okay.
You got the Justice League against the Justice Society.
different groups. You got World War II, the Nazis against the Russians and the Americans, different ways.
I used to always dream about if I could bring them all together, what would happen without usually a group would side with another group.
I said, don't want them to the side.
You always, any movie, any book you see, is one group against another.
What would happen is, I used to say five or six years.
As time went on, I said 10 or 12 group.
As time when on, I said, one more groups.
And they all against these jobs.
nothing to gain except the beautiful women, the gold, so they can't take sides.
Just like in jail, you had your groups, your black groups and your white groups and your
Latino groups.
But if everybody got to come together, it's interesting, but everybody got to fight for a common
goal.
It's even more interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Battle of good and evil and adversity and all those things.
You mentioned, you've been writing since a very young age.
How young, how was it when you started writing?
Really, just have for fun.
I think I was like 9 to 10 years old.
Back in my room, just right, I might see something or read something and say,
I would do it this way and elaborate my way.
Oh.
Yeah.
The inspiration there was kind of like maybe making something your own,
and taking and making something unique to you.
Yeah.
Elaborate, yes.
I really like something.
Yeah.
What was the driver back?
then? Was it a science fiction novels you might have read from other people or books you may have read or
teachers or what would it what kind of inspired you and start writing? Okay. Like I say, the original
Star Trek, the Sergio Leone movies, Bruce Lee movies, the comic books of the Justice League,
the Avengers, you know, all of them. And they used to have a lot of kind of work with
be collaboration where everybody's fighting. That's the main, the main source. It's others, but that's
the main source. That's really good because I grew up in the same sort of thing. The
Surgery of the On movies. Let's see, there was the good, the bad, and the ugly. And then,
but I think Clint Eastwood was in all of them. Yeah, he's the main one. Fisful of dollars.
And he was asking about the protagonist. Yes, he was a protagonist, but you see what he did.
Yes, you did. Yes, full of dollars. I think there was another movie. For a few dollars more.
Oh, yeah, yeah, a few dollars more.
Yeah.
You're bringing it back.
I'll never forget him.
He swings that.
It looks like he's wearing a rug half the time.
He swings that, I don't know what that's called, but swings it over his shoulder.
Yeah.
Pancho.
Thank you.
And, uh, another interesting, because I can say, it's very interesting when the protagonist is, it's not all good.
When they got a little.
Flavor.
Yes.
Bruce Lee and Into the Dragon.
Patagonist, but see what he did.
He did.
some rotten stuff. Plus, a lot of heroes, they're human, so they're imperfect. Exactly. So they have
flaws. They have fallacies. They have issues. Hey, I'm getting too much background noise, y'all.
Okay. And also, James Bond, Sean Connery, protagonist. We see he is. Yeah. Yeah. And I got a little
bit of that in the book, too. Oh, do you? Yeah. So there's so many different perspectives that
that brought them all together. I'm trying to talk too fast on everybody. He can get everything in.
you'll get the idea as you start reading it. Yeah. Now, you've been writing from a very young age.
How many books have you written and how many of you published that people can find out?
This is my first published book. Yeah, I gave up on it 15 years ago, but then when I retired
and I was in the hospital, I ain't going to go into details. I sat there and I say I might as to
give my bucket list and go for it. And so now I'm going forward and it seemed to be working out.
Yeah. But you've written lots of books, I think you may have mentioned, it haven't been.
published. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, this is my first one. Congratulations. Yeah, I just hate to make it
my mind. Sometimes practice makes perfect. And once you get the first one out, then there's more coming.
Do you have some more in the can that you're planning on publishing here soon? If this work out,
I got to get the work. I got to rewrite a whole lot of them. I want to be right. The character,
I used to just write and get to the action. But the character, which my writing teacher told me,
moves the plot on a little bit better in which I did this in this book.
In the past, I was just too eager to get to the plot, to action,
but the character moves it along much better.
Yeah, yeah.
It certainly does.
Certainly does.
Now, with the books, how did you usually write?
What is your pattern for writing and developing characters?
Do you sit down for an hour a day or do you have a certain time that you spend?
How do you keep consistent?
Some people have trouble
with the consistency in writer's block.
Okay.
And I don't get much by the block.
I formulate, especially when I was younger,
formulate a book and style what's about,
and I go and write it down right quick.
But like I say, it wasn't fully developed just this person did this
and this person was an agent, whatnot.
They got to an end, whatnot.
As I got older, I said, you got to tell more about the character,
get into the situation.
Yeah, you got to get there.
And like I say, I don't have much
virus block. In fact, a lot of times
I got to slow down
on just the adventure or the action or the love
making to what the character was about
and then blended in.
Yeah, lots of time I had to do that.
But very seldom I get writer's block.
So I get an idea I wake up in the middle of night
and start writing it down.
Sounds good.
Sounds good.
The writer's block can be hard for people
in developing characters and things.
Now, did,
Did you always write science fiction in a lot of the early writings that you were doing, or did you bounce around in different genres?
I wrote a lot of satisfaction, but I slowed up because it's a lot of technology and words you've got to pronounce right.
So for a lot of there, I was writing westerns a couple of times I was writing about martial arts.
I wrote a few short stories
between men and women situations
and, yeah, a variety
in which you will see in this book too.
Yeah, a couple of chapters
and he goes to the next chapter
it's going to be totally different.
It's going to all blend in,
but say you're writing about
something that's happening in China,
then the next group,
you're writing about Western outlaws.
Somebody would say, what they got to do with each other?
It's going to all blend in.
Street, violence,
jail violence, different groups, but it's going to all blend in.
But I want to get a synopsis about what each group is about.
And I used to write like that when I was younger.
Hmm.
Yeah.
And why do you like that subject so much?
Does it make it easier to invent things and make it work?
Yeah, it just holds interest.
It makes things more interesting when something that's kind of different.
You know, many times tell them to the show you figure it out,
oh, it might be a movie, what's going to happen?
sitting there and figure this is going to happen.
But when they surprise you,
I was saying, yes. I know the Matrix.
It surprised me a lot.
And Star Trek, you surprise me a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It sounds like you were able to watch a lot of great movies and
films and a lot of great characters.
How important is character development in the thing?
You and I both share a love of these same films with Clint Eastwood
and some of the characters that were in.
The bad guys.
in these movies were great too with their characters.
Yeah.
And really developed and fleshed out.
How important is it to take the time and make sure that you really develop your characters?
And how did you maybe approach that in the book, The Energy Game?
Okay, I'm glad you asked that.
When I retired and decided to write series, that's when I realized it was very important.
When I was younger, it was just my own personal guilty pleasure.
I want to get to the plot.
I want to get to the action.
I won't see what they're doing.
Who did they kill, et cetera.
My teachers, a couple of people pointed it out.
So when I retired, I slowed down, I said, let's do it right.
Yeah.
Come down to the characters.
And it really does come down to the characters because you can have an awful plot,
but sometimes a great character can carry a movie.
Exactly.
I've been to some movies where the movie in this script was horrible,
but just the power of the actor, maybe a Sylvester Stallone or Arnold Schwarzenor or whoever it is,
There's lots of great actors in Hollywood.
They can carry the movie.
And you can walk out of that movie and go,
ah, enjoy that movie.
I really love the character.
I don't know about, I don't know who wrote that script.
And the character is like really everything because that's the thing people fall in love with.
We have a lot of authors on the show that have, I don't know what you call them.
They have these, I call them branches, but they have these storylines where they have multiple books
going across one character and this one character.
He's always solving some sort of crime.
in this book and that book and the next book and the next book.
And so they have these series that are running.
And so they like to see how that character not only develops in the first book,
but how he develops over time and, of course, some of the things he gets into.
And people really get hooked on the character of a book.
It's really a big deal for them.
And that's what I was saying.
Each chapter we show the character of the main Indians,
the characters of the main Vikings.
Not long, just get you an idea.
Yeah. So when they all come together in the future, whoever the really is, it's going to be rooting for whoever they like.
Yeah. Yeah. Now, in this book, you have some folks that groups of men that come from different historical countries.
Yeah. You mentioned, like, you mentioned Vikings and stuff. This is said about 100 years in the future.
Now, how did they get all these historical men to come together? Is there, I don't want you to give away anything in the book. You don't want to give away because it's a novel.
But is there maybe time travel involved? Or how did they assess?
these guys, if you can tell us.
I'm so glad you asked that.
The entities, they let loose from this vault, which got power,
they knock out the Federal Space Marines and the other groups in the future.
But they go into their subconscious mind, backtracking their mind who their ancestors are.
In their mind, these certain people in the future, they answers ancestors from 1,000 years ago,
500 years ago, they related.
One guy is related to a Viking. He has no idea.
Another guy is related to a Western outlaw.
He has no idea. Another guy's related to a ninja.
He has no idea.
Oh, wow.
And another guy, you see it all through.
And then when they bring all these guys from the past up, who's related to the guys
that they're from the fight, they have no idea.
They say, okay, we'll fight them.
but and the main thing that the entities want,
they want that testosterone,
which feed men from the past who was not as civil as is now
hit a lot of testosterone.
We got it,
but they hit it way more.
But the ones nowadays,
like the gangs,
etc.,
I'll say even the space defenders,
they testosterone going to elevate
when they know to survive,
they got to fight.
Yeah.
Yeah.
testosterone level is going to elevate a lot.
It sounds like,
that's a hell of a room,
a lot of testosterone and chest beating.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A couple of,
yeah,
the ape tell you.
The ape,
a couple of apes from this intelligent.
Oh,
there's apes,
too,
like Planet of the Aves types or something.
Yeah,
but they,
they found out they ancestors
from Earth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's kind of,
it's kind of,
yeah.
So they're going to
most testosterone.
Yeah.
The entities, they love it.
They love it more and more.
But like I say, a subplot with the female,
they're going to say, okay,
I ain't going to say what they're going to do with a lot of intelligence
or how they're going to dissolve the problem.
Yeah.
You need to have a balance of testosterone estrogen.
Even I have an estrogen problem right now where I've,
I've been taking testosterone supplements, TRT replacement.
Yeah.
Testosterone.
Can't make you aggressive.
Yeah.
But unfortunately, my body's been a testosterone machine most of my life since I've been fat.
So we just did my test.
And I have way too much estrogen going on right now.
So we're dealing with that.
But which may explain why I'm crying every five minutes.
No, I'm just kidding.
So anything more we need to know about what you're doing there.
What about your website?
Is there any upcoming stuff in your website we need to know about any speaking, coaching,
consulting, anything like that?
I'm hoping I can call you back and give you all that.
information,
etc.
Like I say,
I just got into this computer site stuff after I retired.
Yep.
So you want to have a website so that,
yeah,
they can market it.
But yeah,
just let us know what the links are when they come up.
So as we go out,
give people a final pitch out to pick up the book
and order it up where refined books are sold,
Jimmy.
I didn't hear you what?
As we go out,
give us a final pitch out to the audience to pick a book.
Okay, to the audience.
I know a lot,
especially young men when I was young even now, like a lot of action pack adventure book.
But it's got a good plot and it will tell about each group.
It just don't go into the action.
It shows each group what they are about.
They have no choice but to go into the action when the entities bring them to the future to fight.
But you have an idea about what each group is about.
A good idea.
So I think you'll enjoy the book.
I love that you finally got your book out, and I would say dig through that rich history you have of some of the stuff you've written,
and maybe you can find little tidbits or ideas or compiles out of it.
And it would be interesting.
Maybe you can make the end of the game, too, a follow-up sequel to the book, maybe.
I already start writing and I'll let you know.
My idea, it won't be nothing like the first.
The basic, yes.
But sometimes it will be the same thing.
It will not be the same thing, except for the basic plight.
and then it's going to go into another direction.
Maybe you can do a plot where everyone has way too much estrogen.
You'd flip the plot.
Uh-oh.
I like that.
You just gave me an idea.
Put me in the dedication.
It's a good idea.
All right, Jamie.
We'll look forward to whatever work you're putting out next.
Thank you very much for coming on the show, sir.
Okay.
All right.
Thank you.
And thanks, John, for tuning in.
Order up his book where refined books are sold.
There'll be a link for it on the Chris Vos show.
It's entitled The Entity Game.
Can I say one more thing?
Sure thing, Jimmy.
What's up?
What you just said just now, Extra Extraterton, what went through my head is Predators and Clingons.
Ah.
Just now, just a second.
Predators versus Clingons?
And other creatures.
I know it's going to end up being more, but on that level.
Oh.
It just happened just now.
All I can say is if just make the Predators.
sexy because they're kind of not really sexy.
So if you're going to make estrogen predators
somehow make them sexy
where they're debaowing people and killing them.
That sounds even better.
A nice rack.
Thank you very much, Jimmy, for coming to the show. We really appreciate it.
Thanks for us for tuning in. Go to Goodrease.com
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