Continue to follow a story about a dungeon core named “The Eternal Training Ground” as it lives life as it wants to. ETG continues to create new floors, which attracts more and more adventurers who want to discover the secrets this dungeon holds, but more importantly, continue to grow stronger.
It does not take long for local powers to take notice and want a piece of the profit the adventurers are bringing out of the dungeon. Ace, the person officially in charge of and the owner of ETG, must learn to govern and defend what is his or lose the dungeon town he built, his lands, and the contract with ETG.
The English is definitely worse in this book than in the first one. There are multiple times throughout the book where whole paragraphs go by and I have no idea what it said or was even trying to say. The formatting of conversations is also terribly off. Instead of making a new line for someone else talking both speakers are just shoved into the same paragraph with no indentation.
Overall the book is slower than the first. A lot more politics with the dungeon making itself bigger.
I still enjoyed the story a lot, just compare to the first book. To me, it felt like this one really was skipping along the years and added a numbing feeling to the story.
Pretty good and well written but there is no real story or plot nothing seems to happen even the climax was kinda flat but it's a nice and calming read
A notable step up in both quality of writing and general story. Finally beginning to see the outline of a larger plot but still retains mostly a passive storyline throughout