Séduire ou mourir ! Dans le dernier jeu mobile à la mode " Opération Séduction de la demoiselle ", Pénélope Eckhart, la méchante, doit séduire l'un des protagonistes masculins ou sinon c'est la mort ! Pour cela, elle a le choix entre les frères ténébreux, le prince fou, le sorcier caché ou le chevalier esclave. Mais alors qu'elle s'est promis de garder une distance avec ces hommes, il se pourrait que Pénélope se laisse prendre à son propre jeu.
This is such a comforting read! The writing style is easy to grasp and the pace is steady; it’s not loving to fast or to slow. BUT this is part one, and when you finish it you are left in the middle of the story without a resolution, so I feel like I can’t judge this by only volume 1. I’ll have to read volume 2 to know exactly how I feel!
But, that being said, until now I’ve loved the book! 💖 the game simulation trope is one of my favourite tropes!!!
I am not even sure what to fully say, except that the manhwa is a VERY good adaptation of the novel, as there were SO many times when I could see the panels unfolding in my head, which I thought was awesome!
In fact, they were so similar that I struggled a little bit in the beginning because the information was being "repeated" twice and was ready to get to the "good part," so to speak! That was a first for me, and don't get me wrong in saying that! The novel WAS good! But I was surprised how closely they matched, as I think I was fully prepared for scenes and information to be missing, but there wasn't.
That aside, I found the story to have a darker? More serious tone? I felt Penelope's frustration a lot harder in the novel than I did reading the manhwa. It's the same story, I realize, but something about this hit differently, and I can't quite pinpoint what it is.
I know for certain that Eckles and Winter seem MUCH more intense than they did in the manhwa! I remember Eckles being the first one I really shipped with Penelope, and while that feeling has since changed, there is much more darkness surrounding him that I don't think I fully realized until now. I would especially say that was true for Winter, because unlike the manhwa, his affection meter dropped VERY low at one point, and was absolutely shocked! He might be a gentleman, but the novel showed he can be just as dangerous and scary as everyone else!
Funny enough, I did not hate Derrick's character nearly as much in the novel. He is just as cold as ever and definitely blames Penelope for every little thing, but I wonder if not seeing an illustration of his face helped him in this case? Don't worry, though! I came to fully hate him all over again at the scene on the hill because when Penelope compared herself to a microbe, saying she at least didn't want him to see her as a parasite, it reminded me of how he treats her so horribly, to the point she doesn't even feel he sees her as a human!
I feel my review is more of a comparison to the manhwa, which isn't my intention because I really enjoyed reading the "original source"! There were small moments I enjoyed reading about that weren't in the manhwa, that made this feel like a personal treat (especially the scene when Penelope makes a joke with the maids)! I feel the passage of time was slower and really helped me to slow down and take everything in, good and bad.
Overall, I think the manhwa will still be my favorite way to read this story, but I definitely will continue reading the novels! I hope the second volume doesn't take too long to release because after I finished reading this, I went to read the next part in the manhwa! LOL!
I am 100% into this series. I love the manhwa and I love this light novel. I am HOOKED and am seated, quivering in my chair for the next installment.
I have ordered this from my store and have it sitting prominently on my "keepers" bookcase, next to the manhwa volumes that are out thus far.
If you love the isekai villainess sub-genre, this is one of the truly great ones that are out there. I have scraped the bottom of a LOT of barrels to scratch that particular sub-genre itch and this one is CHEF'S KISS.
Penelope is smart and determined, though she doesn't do things perfectly all of the time, she is focused on her goal and won't stop until she reaches it. Of course, if she stops, she's kind of dead, so you can say she is like a shark in that respect. As such, she doesn't let herself relax and actually FEEL anything for anyone other than herself, and I think while that makes sense in what she is going through, that is her Achille's Heel.
I love how she isn't perfect, she's very human, but she is MAGNIFICENT despite, or maybe even because of it. She isn't OP, her struggles are real, and you want her to vault over each and everything that blocks her path. When she does, it is so cathartic!
I know my ship won't sail for this one, but that's ok. The final ship is one I can also get behind. I highly recommend this series, both the manhwa and the light novel. It's all amazing and one I re-read when I need to break a book slump.
5, I can't give any less to Mai Queen Penelope, stars!
My thanks to NetGalley and Yen Press/Ize Press for an eARC of this book to read and review.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
What a fun, immersive read! We’re pulled into the world of a video game right alongside our FMC, and the way the two stories mirror each other is such a clever storytelling choice. We follow her as she navigates not just Penelope’s life, but also her own growth and reflection.
Our FMC has played this game countless times before, but now, trapped in Penelope’s body, every decision matters. What do you remember from past playthroughs? How can you survive when every wrong move could be fatal? Though the game seems innocent at first, darker themes and cunning strategies quickly come into play.
Will she win the affection of one of the love interests? How will the story change now that she’s in it, instead of it being “just a game”? Reading this feels like following a high-stakes chess match, where every move counts and we’re figuring it out right along with her.
Fun, suspenseful, and surprisingly thoughtful, this is a fantastic start to a series that balances romance, strategy, and character growth.
A special thank you to Yen Press and NetGalley for the advanced digital copy; All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Does this prove that the manhwa is a very faithful adaptation? Yes, yes it does. Is it still an excellent read that fully understands the otome game genre and adds some more context for Penelope's life in South Korea? Also yes. It's worth it.
Побольше бы подобных новелл, минимум ненужных описаний, резину не тянут, легко и интересно. Конкретно в этой новелле где то первые 3-4 тома манхвы, так что удобно, учитывая что 3 я уже прочитала
Mais quel livre original! J’aime toujours découvrir une histoire qui sort de l’ordinaire et qui réussit à me surprendre. C’était exactement le cas ici. Je ne connais pas vraiment les otome games, ces jeux coréens dont il est question dans le roman, mais j’aime beaucoup les histoires mettant en scène une héroïne plongée dans l’univers d’un jeu. J’ai trouvé le concept très bien exploité du début à la fin.
L’étoile en moins est surtout due à la fluidité du texte. Par moments, la traduction m’a semblé un peu maladroite et les actions un peu confuses.
Je ne connaissais pas le webtoon et franchement ça donne envie d'aller plus loin ! J'ai beaucoup aimé. J'ai découvert l'adaptation du roman en format audio (lu par Sarah Cornibert) pour @lizzie_livresaudio
Au départ j'étais un peu paumée pour tout comprendre. L'héroïne est propulsée dans un jeu vidéo. Elle se retrouve dans le rôle de la vilaine (Pénélope Eckart). Pour sortir de là, elle doit gagner des points d'affinités. Mais pour l'instant son pourcentage est au plus bas (elle risque donc la mort). Elle a donc plusieurs prétendants à amadouer et doit composer avec plusieurs options pour tirer la meilleure issue possible. Elle se triture donc la cervelle pour remporter des points vers la victoire même si des grains de sable viennent également coincer la belle mécanique.
J'ai vite trouvé l'histoire captivante car pleine d'embûches et de rebondissements. La narration est tout aussi entraînante (la voix de Sarah Cornibert colle parfaitement au personnage). C'est un univers original (celui de l'otome game) avec des personnages plus ou moins caricaturaux. Je pense que la suite va exploiter les parts d'ombre et corser la partie. En tout cas, je n'attends que ça ! Pour un début, c'est plus que bon car maintenant j'ai vraiment envie de connaître la suite. 😊
I read all 231 chapters in like 3 days and this webnovel was amazing! I loved Penelope! She really did not go there to play, she went there to win and she did not stand for anybody's shit! It's really refreshing to have such a practical heroine who doesn't get swayed by the potential love interests! The world building was fleshed out, the characters were distinctive and the plot was pretty good as well. The only thing is that the translations for this webnovel are pretty awful because I think they're mostly machine translated so basically from google translate.
Summary: A girl gets addicted to a game where she has to get 100% favorability from one of the five main guys in order to win. She unlocks a hidden ending and gets transported to the body of the female villain of the story. Her real life backstory isn't that different from the villain's and she works to try to get the favorability of the guys before the main girl arrives. In the game, she's the spoiled and temperamental step-daughter of a duke and the main girl is the bio daughter who disappeared 6 years ago. The main male leads are her two asshole step-brothers, the crown prince, a marquess mage and a slave who becomes her bodyguard.
4.5 look this is really only going to hit if you're into the manhwa as well- we meet every single character in this first volume and if you don't have visuals for them already? you're probably cooked. however, i DO have visuals for them and I already love them (I have also already read this via fan translation which was an Experience that i may have to repeat). My only complaint is that, because there are so many "male leads" for her to interact with, we basically just get introductions to all of them, except for Eclise (not Eckles-I will die on this hill) who will easily make his way into the hearts of all the obsessed-man-loving fangirls (me)
The translation is pretty good, and I don't have a ton of experience with translated novels, but there were some issues with flow and the word choices made the reading experience a bit clunky. Still, I'll take all the content for this series that I can get. More, please.
In the future, I probably won't pick up another South Korean web/light novel. Everyone has their taste when choosing what to read, and this type of story just doesn't fit mine. But I'm glad that I come to this conclusion by giving it a fair chance.
Pros: - It reads quickly since 90% of it is straightforward dialogue; - It's emotionally fulfilling if you fantasize about avenging your wounded inner child against your childhood abusers; - An interesting reevaluation of the male romantic stereotypes in otome games; - Beginning is really good, keeps you on edge.
Cons: - At times, it becomes excessively dramatic and emotionally draining; - It's too long. You need to be committed 110% to get to the end of this, which turns out I'm not; - It's predictable since the writer uses the same formula over and over. Something happens > Penelope gets blamed > she accepts the quest > completes it > demolishes her abuser's ego. It's fun and empowering the first 10 times, but I grew bored after a while; - It left me wishing for happier moments between the characters. Two or three times I was too depressed to continue reading.
Что напрягало, это с каким предубеждением героиня относится к братьям, несмотря на то, что их симпатия к ней растет. Героиня за деревьями не видит леса, но это даже мило. Думаю, если бы мы попали в такую ситуацию, еще неизвестно, как бы сами на это реагировали. Но захватывает. Я пока не поняла, кто из мужских персонажей мне нравится и с кем бы хотелось бы зашиперить героиню. Дерек пока кажется самым перспективным, но и макриз вроде бы ничего такой. Но она обоих вычеркнула из списка.
Thanks to NetGalley for giving me an advanced digital copy in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts are my own.
I've heard a lot of things about the webtoon adaptation of this novel but I never got around to reading it, so when I was approved to read the English translation of the first volume of the original novel, I was really excited.
I have to be honest, I've read many isekai/reencarnation novels before. I like them, they're my cup of tea, it's the trope that will always work for me along with the regression trope. But this one hit different.
First of all, our protagonist (the actual Korean college student who got isekai'd and the real Penelope) is a commoner, someone who understands trouble, misery, hunger and abuse in a way few people do and no one should have to suffer. She's not fighting an already existing FMC who will take everything away from her, but everyone is set against her. And I get her. Intentionally or not, the aithor did a great job making a critique of royalty, nobelty and colonialism through both Penelope and Eckles' characters. But I am getting ahead of myself, let me start from the beginning.
Our protagonist is a Korean archeology student who starts playing a famous otome game per insistence of her friends. As a Love and Deepspace player myself, I found this very relatable. However, this game got popular because of its two playing modes with different main characters: Normal Mode, following Ivonne Eckart and Hard Mode, following Penelope Eckart.
Ivonne Eckart is the true daughter of the Eckart family who is long lost, Penelope Eckart is their adoptive daughter, and the latter has an awful reputation and and even worse relationship with her adoptive family.
After our protagonist clears every love interest's route on the Normal Mode, she finds out it is impossible to clear even one route on the Hard Mode, and the game is very graphic on the grousome fate Penelope faces everytime she loses.
So, after pulling an all-nighter trying to clear even one route on the Hard Mode, she faints and wakes up in the world of the game as Penelope Eckart.
Now, here's the kicker, Penelope's story starts like half a year before Ivonne is found, so she's set on getting 100% affection of any of the love interests before that happens to prevent death.
We also find out Penelope is a victim of abuse at the hands of her second eldest adoptive brother and almost every single servant of the house, which sadly mirrors the in-real life our protagonist previously had.
So, she decides to embark herself on a quest to avoid the adoptive brothers as soon as possible and look for the love interest who don't have any kind of bias against her.
Something I really liked about this book is that we don't know for sure who the male lead is, and we get to actually know a little bit of all of the characters involved, including the NPCs.
It's a story I highly treasure and I cannot wait for January 6th to come around so I can finally read the second volume.
I've never read a light novel before that was based on an existing Manhwa, but I am obsessed. This was an interesting story line about a woman getting trapped in a dating simulator. I listened to the audiobook and had a great time with it. It captivated me a lot more than I was expecting and I'm looking forward to reading more!
This series consumed my life. It’s seriously so good. And the main character is very different from typical female protagonists. She has feelings but she’s not ruled by them, she uses her head and makes calculated decisions in order to survive. Love it, can’t wait to continue.
A young woman wakes up in the body of Penelope Eckhart, the villainess from the Otome game she'd been playing when she fell asleep that night. Furious that she's been taken not just from her own life but trapped in the body of a character who is destined to die she sets out to at very least keep the five love interests from killing her on the spot. Given Penelope's reputation as the "Mad Dog of Eckhart," this seems nigh on impossible. Especially since the longer she lives as Penelope the more she realizes that she may have had some valid reasons for being a villain after all.
This is going to be a long one, so TDLR: Excellent Villainess story.
I was really excited pretty much immediately as honestly, it seemed like this game that our MC gets sucked into was basically made for her. Penelope's life is eerily similar to the MCs; both girls are orphans adopted into rich families, both have brothers that seemingly hate her, a negligent father, and in both cases, the girls enter their adopted families' lives after a tragedy struck. The big difference between the two girls is how they react to things the MC avoids her adopted family at all costs while Penelope is dedicated to making everyone's life a living nightmare. The MC spends much of the book talking about how abused/neglected she and Penelope were/are, which they definitely are, while she completely misses that she's been a brat. Which is understandable to an extent given how young these characters are, however, it becomes less so as Penelope and the MC age. The MC consistently reminds us of how unfair her situation is while never once considering how unfair and confusing it must have been for her IRL brothers and Penelope's.
And that is what makes the MC the Villainess. It's not that she does anything exceptionally evil in this it's that she's lacking in empathy. She's unable to see past her own pain to see that those around her are suffering just as much as she is both IRL and as Penelope. She's the only possible victim in all situations, even when there is evidence to the contrary. In all cases for the love interests, there is clear-cut evidence that these men are facing incredible challenges from having a stepmother trying to assassinate one to slavery in another and she completely disregards how this affects them. And while yes in the love interests' reactions are over the top they aren't any worse than the MC's manipulation of them or events.
She is the perfect Villain. She's absolutely infuriating at times, her choices make little to no sense over and over again. Whatever sympathy she establishes for herself and Penelope comes crashing down in the next chapter as she projects her IRL life onto those who now surround her as Penelope. She refuses to see the people in Penelope's life as anything but characters in a game and treats them as such. She is essentially stunted at whatever age she was when she joined her IRL family, she is so dedicated to the fact that she is the victim that she is virtually incapable of interpreting events in any way that may make her even slightly responsible for any of her existence. She's gloriously evil.
I will definitely be continuing this series as I have a strong feeling Penelope is going to have a rude awakening very soon!
As always thanks to Yen Press and NetGalley for the eArc!
— Merci à NetGalley et à l'éditeur de m'avoir permis de lire une copie anticipée de ce livre en échange d'une critique honnête ! —
Adapter un webtoon en roman, et encore plus en audiolivre représente un vrai défi: deux formats diamétralement opposés. Gyeoeul Gwon s'en sort plutôt bien : pas de surdescription pour forcer les images visuelles, le langage reste simple et l'histoire facile à suivre. Ce n'est pas un style littéraire marqué, mais ça fonctionne pour un moment divertissant sans prétention.
Siyeon, l'héroïne, se retrouve projetée dans un otome game (jeu video de romance basée sur une histoire) où elle incarne Penelope Eckhart, initialement la méchante du Mode Normal, ici héroïne dans la version Difficile du jeu, destinée à une fin tragique. Elle a le mérite d'être maligne : elle ne se contente pas des dialogues pré-définis du jeu, mais réfléchit au contexte, assume sa place de "vilaine" sans jouer à l'héroïne classique. Cette nuance rend son parcours intéressant, surtout avec ces troublantes similarités entre la vie réelle de Siyeon et celle de Penelope dans le jeu. Coïncidence pratique ou double lecture à découvrir ? J'attends la suite pour en savoir plus.
Côté narration, la voix agréable de la narratrice fonctionne bien avec le récit et permet de différencier les personnages sans tomber dans le stéréotype. Les petits gimmicks sonores pour signaler les affichages d'interface et les courtes interludes musicales entre chapitres sont un moyen malin de transposer des éléments purement visuels dans cette configuration audio.
Une bonne entrée en matière qui pose les bases. Maintenant, il est temps que le récit avance vraiment.
After a long night playing a dating‑sim style video game, our FMC wakes up in the body of one of its main characters.. Unfortunately, she hasn’t become the hero, but instead the villain of the story.
The Duke once believed young Penelope might be his long‑lost daughter, but as she grew older and the resemblance faded, the Eckart family began to resent her for fooling them into giving her a life of luxury. But there is so much more to the ‘villain’ and as the FMC controls her actions we get more of a glimpse into what Penelope’s life was actually like, and why she behaved the way she did in the original game.
To complete the game, the FMC must romance one of the MMCs, so the FMC embarks on a quest to improve her low approval ratings with each character. She relies on her memories of the game’s events, and her own instincts, to try to survive long enough to escape the fictional world and return home.
I love the premise of this book! I’ve played this style of game, but I've never read anything like this before. I enjoy a good slow burn, and this one is super slow, l genuinely can’t tell yet who the FMC will pursue or how she’ll win them over. My personal favourite so far is Eckles, but we haven’t seen enough of all of the guys yet for me to rule anyone out. I’m also convinced that there’s more going on beneath the surface. Little comments from characters keep hinting that something strange (even stranger than being teleported into a game) is happening.
With my limited experience of manhwa novel adaptations, I’ve noticed the chapters tend to be long. This one only has five, but they easily could’ve been split further – I personally prefer shorter chapters so I can justify “just one more” before bed. I also felt the ending was a bit abrupt, but that just gave me the perfect excuse to immediately get volume 2!
A college student who just got out of a horrible situation with her father's family finds herself relating to the misunderstood villain of the popular reverse harem video game Daughter of the Duke’s Super Love Project, Penelope. It's not because she's villainous; she just relates to being the unwanted person in the household and being constantly reminded of it. When she wakes up inside the game world in the body of Penelope, she'll have to play her part to perfection and change the story by making one of the love interests fall for her if she hopes to survive it.
This is a book that I've been told a thousand times that I needed to read, and I apologize to everyone who recommended it for not reading it sooner. Something is fascinating about getting all the inner monologue of a heroine who's considered a villain as she tries to navigate an unfamiliar world and survive. She doesn't really know Penelope's past, but the more she finds out and the more she relates it to the awful treatment she received in the real world, the more she starts to stand up for herself and change the story.
The love interests are still a big mystery in this volume, so it's hard to pick who I'd like her to end up with and it makes me want to pick up the next volume as soon as I can because I need to know what happens next.
Very happy thanks to NetGalley and Ize Press for the excellent read!
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy
Villains Are Destined to Die (novel), Vol. 1 by Gwon Gyeoeul is a mixed first and third dual/multi-POV isekai (POVs sprinkled throughout). Siyeon wakes up in the body of Penelope Eckhart, a young noble woman who starred in the Hard Mode version of the dating sim Siyeon was playing. The only hiccup is that Penelope is killed when the affection bar above her family or love interests goes deep into the negatives and Siyeon is starting at zero percent for almost all of them.
The really fun thing about this book was the incorporation of gameplay. I don’t read a ton of isekai, so I’m sure if this is the norm in the subgenre that is based on otome games, but I really liked seeing Siyeon not only seeing her progress but also having different options presented to her, in part because it pops up only when it’s relevant. The further in you go, the more of a question mark it becomes on whether or not Siyeon actually has any power or control over her choices or if the game is railroading her, which makes it more fun.
As I’ve never read the webtoon, I’m not sure how it compares to the novel that it’s based on and what changes might have been made or how the POV switch impacts what the reader gets from the story. For readers who are familiar with the webtoon, this volume goes up to the start of the hunting tournament arc. I can definitely see how the story might benefit from more visual elements as it is sometimes a bit unclear how much the people around Siyeon can and cannot hear and how she is pressing different options when they are presented to her since she’s in the game and not playing it on a console. I would still recommend the novel to readers who strongly prefer prose or who are curious about the webtoon.
Of all of the love interests, Siyeon might have spent the most time with Eckles, but I am leaning towards her ending up with the prince since that’s usually how otome adaptations and things based on otome games goes. I would like to see more of how her relationship with Winter progresses since that was the relationship that felt the most interesting to me given what Winter does in the game on Normal Mode and how they first met. I really don’t think Reynolds would be a good choice for her because I think he has a lot of resentment built up and so does she and while that is super fun to explore in fiction, it doesn’t feel like they’d be able to make it work.
I would recommend this to fans of dating sims and readers who love isekai fantasies
Villains are Destined to Die was an extremely fun read, but I can’t overlook the slop aspects of this story. It’s very similar to those old Gacha Life videos where some character is mistreated to a comical degree and eventually gets their revenge. Penelope’s real world brothers are comically evil to a degree that takes me out of the story whenever she mentions them. The main plot is pretty interesting, although I don’t buy the whole thing of one wrong step and it’s instant death for Penelope. My last major criticism is that Penelope feels very mean which I don’t understand for her character. I understand she might be trying to “play the part” but a lot of the time it comes off as unnecessarily rude and self-sabotaging. It’s a very addicting read that sucked me in even if I could see some glaring flaws. Very fun time and I’m looking forward to reading more.
So, I am giving it a 5 star for the manhwa ( just loved the animation). After reading the novel, I kind of wanted to give it a 4 star since towards the end our heroine became very annoying. Spoiler [I mean, did she really needed the Crown Prince to beg her to stay beside him? And it’s not like he didn’t said it to her many times that he loved her and wanted to marry her…I like my ML to be dominant until the end, thank you very much, not to look like a pussy] Can’t wait for the manhwa to be finished though..
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.