Picking up where the bestselling videogames left off, the Mass Effect novels take readers into the far reaches of outer space. From the prequel novel, Revelation, to the series capstone, Deception, these original adventures weave together a science fiction epic as they follow Starship Alliance commander David Anderson and his young protégée, scientist Kahlee Sanders, in their battle to save humanity. Packaged together for the first time, this exhilarating eBook bundle REVELATIONASCENSIONRETRIBUTIONDECEPTION Since discovering a cache of Prothean technology on Mars in 2148, humanity has spread to the stars. Now, on the edge of colonized space, ship commander and Alliance war hero David Anderson investigates the remains of a top secret military research station. Who attacked this post and for what purpose? And where is Kahlee Sanders, the young scientist who mysteriously vanished from the base hours before her colleagues were slaughtered? Sanders is now the prime suspect, but finding her creates more problems than it solves. Partnered with a rogue alien agent he can’t trust and pursued by an assassin he can’t escape, Anderson battles impossible odds on uncharted worlds to uncover a sinister conspiracy—one he won’t live to tell about. Or so the enemy thinks.
Drew Karpyshyn is a Canadian author and game designer. After working at a credit union for some time, he eventually became a game developer. He joined BioWare towards the end of the Baldur's Gate series, and wrote the tie-in novel for Baldur's Gate II: Throne of Bhaal. He stayed with BioWare, where he worked on Neverwinter Nights, and became the Senior Writer on the critically acclaimed Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic.
This Star Wars connection gave him the opportunity to write Darth Bane: Path of Destruction, his first hardcover. Karpyshyn still works for BioWare where he is the lead writer for the Mass Effect series.
For the sake of your own sanity, skip the fourth novel. Not only is it immensed in factual errors (you don't have to nit pick at all either, the author makes sure you'll notice them every other page), grammar mistakes (if you can't get 'where' / 'were' correctly 100% of the time, then you have a clear sign from the universe that you should not to write a book), and most of all, if you take all the other errors away and just try to read the book as it is, it is morbidly boring and badly written as a book.
I was recommended to play the Mass Effect triology years after the whole series came out. It wasn't until I finished the first game that a friend and big fan told me I needed to read these aswell and in a specific order, so the order was: Revelations -> Mass Efffect 1 -> Ascension -> Mass Effect 2 -> Retribution -> Mass Effect 3
I am happy I went back and did the order, in case anyone else hasn't played through and wants to incorporate the books.
BEING THIS IS NOT A GAME REVIEW, as far as the books go, I actually really enjoyed learning more about people who aren't technically main characters in the games. It was a great mix of lore/universe expansion + appreciation for lore and characters we already know. The pacing is good as each perspective drives to a united end, each book.
However, I do think if you read these books by themselves without playing the games, I imagine it wouldn't feel nearly as satisfying. Without spoilers, the books ties directly into the games...to the point that you will meet people you have read about while playing (that are original to the books) if you read them in the right order. Truely it was a great experience BUT I am sure that's because I treated the books as part of the game play package. Highly recommend as compulsory addition to game play. I am sure its fine by itself but really it shines as additional content to the games.
4 stars as it's really good when coupled with the games. By itself I am not sure.
I DID NOT READ DECEPTION, I DIDN'T KNOW IT EXISTED AND IT APPARENTLY TAKES PLACE AFTER MASS EFFECT 3 (and everyone seems to not consider it cannon...which if it follows the ending of ME3 I can understand the bitterness.)
Disclaimer: I have never played the Mass Effect video games. I read the series because I'm doing some research on the Kardashev Scale, and the interwebz suggested that the Reapers would be a good example of a Class III civilization. So I read the books mostly out of general curiosity.
I enjoyed books 1-3 quite a bit. Unfortunately, the fourth book kind of nukes the whole bundle. The plot went sideways, and meandered in an unpleasant way. And all the empathy and goodwill I had accumulated for the characters in books 1-3 went by the wayside and I literally did not care if they lived or died.
My 2 cents: if you have the option to read books 1-3, just stop there.
These where not nearly as good as i had hoped they would be. it was nice to see some of the back story i just think the plots could have been a little more engaging and other then the first book they could have had a little more to do with the actually game. I felt the last three where kind of on their own with some elements of the games thrown in so you knew you where dealing with the Mass Effect universe.
I loved the first three books and enjoyed the overall plot of the fourth but some of the characters in the fourth book were very different from their portrayal in the earlier books (particularly Hendel Mitra and Gillian Grayson), enough so as to feel like they were different characters given the same name.
The first three books were fantastic. The formatting wasn't perfect but the books were still enjoyable. Do yourself a huge favor and skip the fourth book. It's atrocious.
Great novel series that's true to the games. Perhaps a few too cameos of places and name drops, but really helped develop the characters and provided good lore.