Title: Gestation
Author: John Gold
Published: May 22, 2018
Publisher: Litworld Ltd.
Right off the bat, I’m going to disclose that I have never read a LitRPG book before. To be even more honest, I didn’t even know there was such a genre, and I really didn’t know what to expect as far as content. So, from what I gathered from half-hearted research, the plot and setting takes place within a virtual reality. A popular book-to-movie example is Ready Player One by Ernest Cline. So, that is the gist of the genre: someone playing a fully-immersive MMORPG where you feel and experience everything realistically.
Now, I have played a handful of these games, and have extensively played Black Desert Online, which is a very popular Korean MMORPG. If there is one thing that any player knows, it’s that success is determined by leveling up, obtaining the best loot from mobs, and the constant finger-and-thumb breaking repetition of GRINDING. Which, paired with an uninteresting storyline/plot, chased me away from the game. I haven’t returned since. Now, once they come out with deep-dive technology, I’ll consider hopping back on. (Unless we experience the horrors of Sword Art Online, an anime where players are trapped in-game and will die in real-life if they die within the game… (Or if someone attempts to disconnect them from the system, which will promptly kill them, too.)
Anyways, the synopsis of Gestation was interesting enough. I liked the cover, and they compared it to Sword Art Online, which I liked—for the first half of the season. I was thinking that it would be a change in pace, considering I don’t read a lot of Sci-Fi, and I wanted to see what LitRPGs were about. When I was looking at the author, Gold expressed that much of his inspiration comes from video games and other really popular LitRPG authors in Russia. Yeah, I guess Russians like LitRPGs?
I gotta say , I really liked it, but still found myself annoyed with some of the aspects. Anji, the main character, was extremely OP. He’s your typical angsty, genius, orphan with a serious superiority complex. Regardless, I was rooting for him! I wanted him to stick it to everyone who stepped on him. The rest of the characters were pretty one-dimensional. Granted, many of them were NPCs (Non-playable characters.*Video-game lingo!) But I needed more from him. Why was he like this? Surely not ALL orphans turn out to be rather sociopathic?
Continuing with my minor complaints, I was rather nonplussed at the beginning from the serious lack of world-building. Clearly this is a post-Earth future. But why? I felt like I was *LITERALLY* floating in space, confused and disoriented. There was little foundation, and I felt like I was just trying to puzzle everything together as the story moved along.
The in-game grind and leveling. There is a point where something BIG happens to Anji. He gets betrayed and thrown (quite literally) in dire circumstances. This becomes a huge portion of the story, and it’s essentially a dialogue of him leveling up his skills, evolving into something else. This process takes 1.5-ish years, and it ends up being for nothing. I just felt that it was unnecessary to see the numerical values of his skills increase.
Overall, I think that with every work, there are kinks to be worked out and wrestled with. As much as I enjoyed the concept, there were some definite holes that needed filling! I would, however, recommended this book to anyone interested in the genre.