After the devastating events of last term, Fang has clawed his way back from the brink, rising in strength faster than anyone expected. But something about this new Hellwave feels different for the older generation. This one is hungrier, denser, and frighteningly fast.
As tensions flare between the three ruling noble houses, the Academy becomes a battlefield of politics and pride, where every alliance could mean salvation or ruin. With betrayal still fresh and his name caught in the crossfire, Fang refuses to stay silent. This time, he won’t bow, won’t bite his tongue. If the nobles want to put a leash on the weapon he is becoming, he’ll show them just how dangerous it is to play with fire.
Still enjoying the story but, like the first one, desperately in need of a lot of editing. Besides the usual typos in this one a character changes multiple times. From Alren to Alric to Alren again. It does really detract from the story.
I read These two books because of the words of the promotion. Mainly that if I was fans of certain series , I would enjoy this story. Unfortunately, due to the atrocious editing and proofreading, lack of world background, inaccurate mathematics, and i cannot give you more than two stars. The story has the potential to be 4 or even 5, but it would take a complete rewrite to accomplish this. In the first book toward the end, he had his arm removed, And yet he continued to clap repeatedly...( okay, granted, he is a budist monk and they are famous For the sound of one hand clapping... But give me a break) Scores of instances where words were left out of sentences , or a different word , was imposed that makes no sense. Apparently after eating figs he bent to level fourteen , yet the next time he advanced , he was only advanced to 4... And this is , after he had killed two platinums, multiple gold, and silver monsters... He advanced a negative 10! Only a couple of examples among multitude, no world background, almost no system abilities explained. Overall just poorly written without regard.
A good story and likable characters in what should be a great series is burned to ashes because of the myriad of errors. Paragraphs repeated, the wrong words used, word meanings inverted, a single ‘e’ in the middle of the page, the mc is declared level fourteen then levels up to level four, and many like errors. The book is so short you can read it in a day and yet the author clearly never has. It feels like I care more about the book than the author.