Dallion thought that his successful encounter with the Star would grant him calm, respect, and the luxury of leveling up at his leisure. He couldn’t have been more wrong.
Juggling between surprise visits from old friends, new guild responsibilities, and the preliminary trials for the glorious Festival Tournament, Dallion gets caught up in dealings with Nerosal’s awakened criminal underground.
Yet, even that pales when compared to the new threat that has befallen the city. An ancient copyette has escaped its banishment, returning to the real world. Millenia ago, it tried to conquer the world. Now, it can be anyone, even one of Dallion’s closest friends.
So many worlds to explore… So much time… And always someone trying to take it away…
Book 3 of a unique spin on Isekai LitRPG filled with countless pocket-realms to explore. A zero-to-hero, slow-build Progression Fantasy you won't be able to put down.
3.75 stars. I found book 3 to be slow to read. It was interesting, but needed a little more forward momentum. I have next 2 books in the series, but will move to something else for a while.
I can’t really read these books anymore. There’s too many things wrong so much promise and maybe the later books are better impossible to say, but I just can’t push on no matter how much I want to. So there are some glaring problems with the writing and the way the characters interact with each other specifically there are things happening that just never get explained. It’s almost like they’re purposefully done as a plot device, but the biggest thing is the fact that no time elapses when awakened people go into these realms, and unfortunately, the author never really figure out a way to make this all work with the story. There needs to be a bit more structure and a bit more building around the mechanics when you can and cannot do this, and how that affects the way the characters interact with each other, it’s all sort of sloppy right now. I’m gonna DNF.
Automatic 1-star for books that haven't been edited. Massive number of obvious simple mistakes -- wrong words, wrong names, wrong numbers. Also many less simple mistakes, like major world building fundamentals that keep changing and contradicting itself.
The protagonist says so many false things that I can't tell what is going on with him. Are the false things mistakes by the author? Hallucinations by the protagonist? Stupidity by the protagonist? There are some indications that the protagonist is intended to be pathological liar, but I can't tell if that is true because of all the mistakes!
The third book in the series disappointingly lacks innovation, and the initial ideas from the first book are exhausted. Persistent issues, such as the rushed narrative and the main character's unrealistic progress, persist from the previous books. This book introduces new problems, ranging from unnecessary drama to MC acting more stupidly. Overall, it was a subpar experience, marking a noticeable regression in the series with each books. It's a shame; with proper editing, this series could have reached its full potential.
Lost all interest at about the 1/3 mark. The story is just getting boring and the random relationship drama just killed it for me. I kept putting the book down every few minutes.
Every book continues to dig deeper into a great story that continues building. Just when you think it can't get any deeper, we sup further into Alice's wonderland.
Ohhhweeee the series is getting really exciting. The love triangle that wasn't that had Dallion so worried was anti-climatic. I don't know why he was so worried about Gloria and Eury meeting one another.