An action-packed progression fantasy adventure from Inadvisably Compelled, the bestselling author of Paranoid Mage!
Underestimated. Underpowered. His greatest weapon is his mind. Twenty years ago, the hero Glorybeam and the villain Blacktime fought. The aftermath leveled twenty city blocks, killed thousands, and orphaned hundreds. Neither of them have ever faced any consequences.
Isaac Hartson was one of those orphans. As a nominal-class metahuman – a dreg – he knows that he’ll never be able to hold them accountable by force, but years as a janitor have taught him the value of simple plans and hard work.
But once set in motion, events stay in motion, and in Star City there is always someone with an angle. Isaac will need more than just hard work and a simple plan to keep from being buried under the tide of consequences he’s created.
He was supposed to be a background character. Instead, he’s the glitch in their perfect system.
From the bestselling author of Paranoid Mage, OBJECTS IN MOTION is a progression fantasy adventure featuring an intelligence-based MC who is given a brawler power.
It's perfect for fans of Super Supportive, Invincible, and Superpowereds!
Extremely good book and maybe the interesting superhero concepts I've ever encountered
Wow, this was a major step up from Paranoid Mage. A much bigger focus on characters and events aren't just glossed over. Isaac and his powers are fascinating. And this is some of the most unique world building I've ever run into in fiction. How superhero powers can grow based on expanding concepts is quite frankly brilliant and one of the most interesting Superhero worlds and power designs ever made. This should be an Amazon show someday. Great world design, good characters, solid plotting, really interesting action scenes and mostly excellent prose. Highly, highly recommended read. Just phenomenal.
I've read the previous series (Paranoid Mage), but it's this one where the author really finds his wings. Isaac is also a protagonist that just wants to be left alone (plus, get back on some people from the past at the same time) and goes to tremendous lenghts to achieve it, which of course fails miserably, but he has his own quality. It is endlessly entertaining, especially as I've grasped what the protagonist's superpower really is , even if he does not yet understand it, causing so many domino effects in the process it's hard not to laugh.
This book made me think of the Disco Elysium game, which has similar wacky but brilliant things stuffed in there. In DE your stats are alive, and give you feedback.
In this book it's about powers that work not just on the physical but also on the way you think about them and how you think about them.
Your power could even be philosophical, which is a bit of a mind bender.
Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and I personally think that the author has progressed substantially from his first series. Where the first series the MC was a bit stiff and strange, this is much less the case here.
Very interesting premise from Inadvisably Compelled. I was a huge fan of Paranoid Mage and was extremely excited for this series, but it seems like a little out of the author's comfort zone. The world building was interesting but felt crowded with little exposition. Why is there a civil war on the moon? What is the Cosmic Orrery and crystals that surround the planets? Definitely looking forward to the next work!
Cool super hero vibe. People who liked Steelheart or Superpowereds would like this. The MC finds himself kind of in between the super heroes and villains through a lot of the story. This leads him into interesting situations. The world is cool and the MC’s ability is original. Overall it was a really good start to the series.