Unflattering coverart hides a seriously GOOD LitRPG series.
No spoilers! I have read a lot of these series, I’ve been really into this Isekai/RPG genre the last year or so. I’ve read at least 8 series up to their latest novel, and have sampled some others I didn’t want to go on with. I have to say, I had this book in my wish list for a LONG time. And that is because the coverart just seemed like this was cartoony and maybe campy. But eventually I pulled the trigger.
I’m so glad I did! I love the story, love the world-building, love the magic system, love the characters.
The story is great, and what makes it great is first that it does a great job mixing leveling and grinding with both big events and fights with real people as well as with character and world development. Second is the pacing. The way it weaves these elements together feels seamless. I never feel like skipping ahead when the MC reviews his stats for umpteenth time or when characters rehash topics endlessly as happens so much in other series. Even with battles that last days, the author may bring us in at the climax, or at the first skirmish, and then wrap it up off page and we are there for the aftermath. I love that we aren’t forced to endure page after page of the same skills and combat on various enemies and situations. At this point, we know our MC and what he can do, we don’t need to relive every single moment, just some highlights and the gist. That’s great welting. Third is just the thought that went into the world building, the magical system, and the characters and their development arcs. It feels so seamless, because it was carefully thought out. I can’t find any faults with the logic and decision making of characters within the bounds of what the author already established.
The world building is interesting and unique, I can’t find another series to compare it to. It’s very intriguing and parts of it are mysterious. For instance, I’m so curious as to what Ascension means exactly. There’s also a plethora of higher tiered characters who add depth and historical and political context to the universe the author is building. It seems to be a trope of this genre that most do the series are written entirely from the POV of the MC, this series does focus on the MC but jumps around to give us that needed context. The universe also has rules of war enforced by the society’s elites, even on each other. These rules aren’t simply there as a plot device to allow for progression, but it is woven into the way their world works. The rules make sense in the context of the universe the author had built. That’s next level writing! And so refreshing!
The magic system is very good in a number of ways. First, is that there are not simply an endless amount of classes, races, skills as so many series have, nor are they barely touched upon as happens in others, no there are a set number of levels, called tiers, and there are many skills but there are common ones shared by most tiered people. There are some interesting aspects of uniqueness per individual with their talents, concepts, and aspects which come into play at different, but not set, levels of progression. The combination of these unique talents with this pool of skills that anyone can access, by either buying them or getting lucky and getting them as rewards a system I love which levels the playing field, this combination means people can create their own unique paths up the tiers, and aren’t beholden to skill trees as is so often the case in the more complicated magic systems of some other series.
Finally the characters, live the back story of the characters. They couldn’t be more different, one’s a poor orphan, another the child of some of the most powerful people alive, another a beast evolving into sentience before our eyes. Yet despite those differences, they share values, not just of ambition, but of morality of what they value in others, friendship, kindness, respect, and honesty. There is real depth here with the characters, we see their weaknesses, what they struggle with, how they deal with adversity and mistakes. We are right there while they cope with trauma be it grief for Matt or inferiority for Liz. Finally, we directly address morality and right and wrong. One would think with the disproportion of power in beings of these series, morality would be a necessary part of character development, but it’s rarely addressed. Or if it is, it is done so in an unsatisfying way, such as a mental shrug cause the world is harsh or whatever. Not here, here we return to that topic again, as our characters try to become the people they want to be, not what abilities make them.
Some people may say the MC is overpowered. I would argue this is power fantasy, and that it is more of a trope for an MC to face a series of contrived issues to nerf their potential until the very end. In my opinion, it is much better to embrace what this genre really is instead of stringing us along to see the MC struggle for the sake of itself. The trick is in to giving the people what they want, power fantasy, and just weaving it into a gripping story not following the same old narrative structure we’ve seen countless times.