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Tamer: King of Dinosaurs 11

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Dinosaur Land is a game, and Victor Shelby believed he was a king. Until he met Milena, the immortal goddess.

She cannot be killed.

She cannot be overpowered.

She cannot be resisted.

Victor must submit to her rule. But Milena’s enemies have their own plans and their own godlike powers. In order to survive the onslaught of two enemy tribes and turn the tables on Milena, Victor must use his Tame ability in ways he never thought possible.

And he’s going to have to do it in the least expected place…
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About the author

Michael-Scott Earle

78 books1,608 followers
NYT and USA Today bestseller of fiction. Top 100 Amazon best selling author.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
226 reviews
April 25, 2026
Victor continues to gain friends and lover and learns a little more about the aliens. Personally not the best adition to his clan but that maybe because i did not like the new character.
3 reviews
June 18, 2026
I've been moderately invested up until now but I think the author is starting to lose it because a pretty huge portion of this book is straight up psychotic.

This book is more of the same as the rest of the series but this time the author for some reason decided to write the Female Main Character as literally worse than Hitler.

In this book the author actually tries to justify mass genocide. He points out all the benefits like its some sort of enlightened point of view ripped straight from reddit because it supposedly benefits civilization. But benefits it for who? Take a moment and try to have some empathy, which I'm seriously starting to doubt this author has any of, and think about how appreciative the person receiving the bullet to the back of the head is, that society is being advanced at their expense, how incredibly humanitarian.

The author then tries to excuse the horrifying moral implications by saying the woman responsible got betrayed and this is some sort of emotional backlash. But are we really supposed to sympathize with Victor if he can hand wave away the super holocausts because the woman responsible is hot and has a sob story? I was actually positive for the first half of the book that this was going to be the first big female antagonist that Victor has to kill to prove that even hot women dont get a pass if theyre completely psychotic, but no, the author missed that chance at character development. It seems like Victor can forgive anything provided it gets him laid. That's practically the definition of a sociopath - why is the author writing this?

So lets take a look at some of the women Victor does kill. In this this book near the end Victor slaughters several women. First he attempts to have his dinosaurs eat them, then he begins to burn them alive and finishes by slicing them in half, all while they beg for their lives. Their Crimes to deserve such fates? They teleported him and Fem-Hitler to their home worlds for a little bit. They didnt even do the teleporting, they just helped some other guy, presumably with the threat of their own deaths hanging over them...

Victor listens to Fem-Hitler relish the destruction of millions of innocent lives and cant muster more than the most passive of responses and instead he goes on to sleep with and fall in love with her, but teleport him and his genocidal GF home and he goes full murder hobo.

Go watch Schindlers List or read the diary of Anne Frank and keep in mind that the woman in this book is responsible for atrocities several times worse and then realize that the author legitimately tried to justify her actions. Then realize that the main character fell in love with her while knowing her crimes. Seriously? We're supposed to root for THAT guy?

And to anyone who thinks I'm taking this too seriously - authors don't write narrative details if they're supposed to be ignored. I'm giving equal weight to the fact that the main character fell in love with Hitler as I do the rest of his actions. But running around petting dinosaurs and fighting battles for survival is juuuust a bit different from multigenerational institutional genocide and torture.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews