With the desert behind him, Illusia travels deep into a forest rumored to house a dangerous tribe called the Lithovar. He encounters a human couple mid-battle. They're from a tribe...of dragon-worshippers! He cancels his plans to become human to enjoy his new life as a dragon god instead. Still, what's with the man who bursts into tears and yells, "Dragon God, we thought you'd forsaken us"? He must have the wrong guy...or dragon.
All the characters are extreme stereotypes in one way or another. Interactions with the second head are all dull and really dumb and not believable at all for it being an intelligent creature. All villains who oppose the mc in this series fit to one extreme or the other and aren't realistic in the slightest. Only saving grace for the story is the unique ideas and world, none of the characters outside of the mc in the entire series of books have any depth at all. Would be 1 star but the world the author built is still pretty cool and the unique concept behind it giving a twist to the genre raises it up a lot and is really the only reason to read the books.
A pretty good story while there is nothing major like Illusia evolving but we do get a lot of new characters introduced and most of them becoming allies to Illusia and I do like they are pretty varied like a tribe of humans that worship him, a family of spiders, a treant, and a undead mage. I still find the split personality thing kind of annoying and would have preferred if he was in control of both heads but luckily it does not get that annoying in this story.