Mason and his brother Blake have so far survived the Great Game, and even thrived. But for how much longer?
Blake defeated the orc tyrant made just to kill him, and now settles into the 'White Tower' with the beautiful orc ruler he installed. With charm, and an army of constructs, he intends to make the once-enemies into allies. And that's just the start of his ambitions...
Meanwhile, Mason's 'divine' dreams are leading him to explore the continent. He has great trees and a settlement to protect, druid blessings to earn, and a growing group of beautiful women to manage. If the nearby guild of goblin wizards and assassins don't destroy it all first...
The Primal Hunter meets harem. With millions of views on Royal Road and Scribblehub, this series has more than 10 books worth of story, and more to come!
The First Great Game is a litrpg/harem sci-fi/fantasy series about two brothers who come of age and find incredible adventure, and equally incredible women, in a post-apocalyptic video game world.
The first 3 books were decent enough, but the focus on sex scenes at the expense of territory management is starting to piss me off. I get it, Mason doesn't like people, doesn't like socialising or niceties. The least he could do tho is find a second in command who does. Like Haley or Suul-ki You might keep a group of superhumans in line merely by being the biggest bastard around, but you won't motivate them to contribute that way.
As is, author spends 95% of time complaining about territory management than actually trying to do any. Instead he rushes on home every god damn time -like a boy skipping on class- to have sex.
Plenty of adventure battles, fighting sex, more character development. A really epic fight scene and battle. Looking forward to reading more in the series. If you like the previous books, you'll like this one. If you didn't like the previous books, you're not going to find anything much different. I apologize for any spell and errors. I'm writing this review with voice to text
Another great entry to the series. I do miss the sociopathic nature of one of the brothers, as that was always fun to read. All in all an enjoyable time.