Hello, I'm Amber and I'm a James A. Hunter fiction fan. I also need a support group for my little side addiction, MMORPGs. I love his VGO series unreservedly and have said so more than once to friends and family alike.
Therefore, I was totally excited to hear about The Artificer, a "DLC" novel of VGO. For those of you who are not gaming nerds, that's "downloadable content" or in this case, a novel that extends the world. Hunter and his co-author S R Witt took on telling the backstory for Robert Osmark, the founder of VGO, and the would-be villain to the series hero, Grim Jack.
In this book, Witt and Hunter take on a bit of a challenge. How to do you take the big bad guy and make a story that's interesting and compelling while still keeping him true to type? Commonly in fiction, an author gives the character some small hidden charm, a redeeming factor that makes him likable and "morally" relate-able. (For the backstory on Darth Vader we got little Anakin, for instance.)
In The Artificer, Robert Osmark makes no bones about his ambition, his intellectual superiority, his penchant for needing to control things down to the smallest detail, and first-and-foremost, his desire to ensure he retains the power INSIDE his virtual world that he had when he was still outside of it.
Frankly, that results in a series of actions that gave me pause in the book to wonder if I liked him. Several times. It's a testament to the authors' skill that I kept reading.
All the stuff you loved about the first three books is there. Seeing the transition of another character from "real life" to VGO is there. Stat sheets, world details, game theory — all there. The Artificer also starts to lean in a darker direction in the descriptions of violence and combat - on par with Hunter's Yancy Lazarus novels.
In the end, I'm giving this a slightly lower rating than I have the other books in the series - while I think it might possibly be a technically better book - because The Artificer, like Robert Osmark, doesn't pull it's punches. Osmark is not a nice guy deep down - which makes it very credible that he's the only person who could have had the vision and the drive to build VGO.
It's an interesting deeper look at the main antagonist of the VGO world, but I definitely recommend reading the other three VGO books first.