Acclaimed Entertainment Veterans Eric S. Rollman & Craig Kyle Level Up The Production Squad For “Infinity: Paradise Lost”


Corvus Belli Keeps Dropping Major Expansions for Its Epic Sci-Fi Wargame
Infinity is invading animation, video games, novels, comics, and beyond — and the new recruits are reporting directly to Director/Studio Head Jay Oliva.


LOS ANGELES, CA (April 9, 2026) – As a die-hard Infinity player who’s spent way too many nights painting Yu Jing heavy infantry and debating whether the Combined Army or Haqqislam has the better lore, I’m absolutely geeking out over this news.


Corvus Belli’s flagship tabletop wargame — that razor-sharp, high-stakes game of futuristic espionage, hacking, and brutal close-quarters combat set in the Infinity universe — is pushing even deeper into the big leagues. Today they announced two absolute heavy-hitters joining the production team for the animated series Infinity: Paradise Lost.


Joining as Executive Producer is Eric S. Rollman, Emmy Award-winning legend and founder of Rollman Entertainment. This guy basically wrote the playbook on turning killer IPs into must-watch TV. After running Marvel Animation and holding top spots at Saban and Fox Family, he’s become the go-to guy for adapting video game worlds into addictive, character-driven series. He’s already wrangled Skylanders Academy, Overwatch, Crash Bandicoot, RAID: Shadow Legends… and yes, he’s no stranger to Infinity itself. If anyone can make the intricate factions, moral gray areas, and insane tech of the Human Sphere feel alive and binge-worthy, it’s Rollman.


Taking the role of Lead Writer is Craig Kyle — a name that should make any comic, animation, or game nerd sit up straight. The man who co-created X-23 (Laura Kinney), co-wrote Thor: Ragnarok, and served as co-creator and showrunner on the killer Netflix series Pacific Rim: The Black. With two decades of experience across animation, live-action, streaming, and AAA games, Kyle brings exactly the kind of sharp storytelling and deep character work this universe deserves.


Both Rollman and Kyle will work closely with Lex+Otis Studios President and series showrunner Jay Oliva (the visionary director whose credits already include some of the most visually stunning animated action out there).


If you’ve ever rolled dice on a Paradiso campaign, lost sleep theory-crafting about the EI’s true endgame, or painted up your Nomad Jurisdictional Command force at 3 a.m., this one hits different. The Infinity universe — with its layered politics, ancient alien threats, corporate intrigue, and soldiers who are as much hackers as they are killers — finally has the kind of top-tier talent that can do it justice on screen.
Here’s hoping we get some serious Aleph vs. Tohaa vibes, brutal TAG battles, and at least one scene where a Shasvastii infiltrator absolutely mind-screws everyone.


The Human Sphere is about to get a lot more cinematic. Stay frosty, commanders.