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Ten Realms #2

The Second Realm

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When Erik and Rugrat entered the ten realms they didn’t know what was going on. They only knew that they had contracted the two week curse.

When entering the second realm they came to understand their character sheets, and part of the system that is called the ten realms. A place that the strong make the rules and the weak cling to them for protection and hope that they might be left in peace.

They passed through the trials of the Beast Mountain Dungeon, taking control of it and becoming the leader of nearly two hundred people.

Now in command of the Alva Dungeon and looking to forge a new future, they need more power, mana stones, dungeon cores, monster cores, if not then the Dungeon will stop functioning and they will need to relocate once again.

As they ascend to the second realm, Erik and Rugrat need to grow their skills, gain information and find a dungeon. It’s hardly ever that easy.

22 pages, Audible Audio

First published August 28, 2018

1595 people are currently reading
486 people want to read

About the author

Michael Chatfield

69 books1,383 followers
Michael Chatfield is a Canadian Army veteran and international bestselling author who writes the kind of books he always wanted to read—character-driven, gritty, tactical, and grounded in reality.

He doesn’t write one-dimensional killers wrapped in plot armor, charging toward an objective without thought. His stories are built for readers who want earned progression, tight, understandable logic, and realistic strategy. Every stat system has structure. Every decision is deliberate (except when there is Jaeger involved).

And the pacing? It's locked at two hundred percent. From alleyway brawls to starship armadas clashing over galactic sovereignty, from tactical dungeon assaults to city-states warring over a continent’s fate—Chatfield commits to every battle like it’s his last.

With millions of books and audiobooks sold, and tens of thousands of reviews his work spans LitRPG, military sci-fi, fantasy, and post-apocalyptic survival. He writes for readers who value systems that make sense, loyalty that lasts, and power that’s earned, not handed out.

Whether you're listening on a long drive, grinding through a shift, or up past midnight planning the next in-game raid—this is where you’ll find sagas to binge. Where strength is earned, logic rules, and camaraderie is forged in fire.

You can connect with him on Patreon and don't forget to follow him on social media!

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/authormichael...
Website: http://michaelchatfield.com/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@authormichael...
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/authormicha...
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authormichae...
Facebook Group: The Chatfield Connection - https://www.facebook.com/groups/37693...

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5 stars
3,979 (57%)
4 stars
2,019 (29%)
3 stars
699 (10%)
2 stars
153 (2%)
1 star
36 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 258 reviews
Profile Image for Jacob Proffitt.
3,295 reviews2,143 followers
January 26, 2023
This is an isekai/LitRPG series that expects you to read in order. I endorse that expectation.

So you know what you're getting. More hijinks by the ex-military protagonists. I like the build-up of the village-turned-dungeon, Alva, and its inhabitants. So the core quest/adventure/plot was interesting. I also liked Erik and Rugrat honing their various interests. Crafting is inherently boring in terms of story, so seeing Chatfield stick to the interesting bits (and creating interesting bits) was enlightening.

The pace dragged a bit in places and some plot points seemed a bit samey, so it isn't all win. I enjoyed the interactions with the Blue Lotus Trading House and how that relationship with our two heroes has grown and provided them a strong base socially. It made sense and held together, even if "Erik heals a family member of someone powerful" is becoming a bit of a trope well on its way to cliché.

I'm going to give this one four stars, recognizing that some of the shine is off. It was still very entertaining, at least if you like this kind of story (as I obviously do). But it is a downward trajectory so I hope the next story discovers new territory.

A note about Chaste: In this book, one of our heroes gets some! Entirely off the page and even the one kiss we see was from an external PoV. So it's still very chaste and can I say how refreshing it is to have two high-capacity soldier boys who aren't complete horndogs? I can and I will!
Profile Image for Johnny.
2,158 reviews77 followers
November 16, 2018
Book two

Mistakes: This is by far such sub par work from Michael Chatfield, that I'm just stunned that it was even published.
You have missing letters, numbers inserted into words, messed up punctuation, misspelled words, miss used words, missing sentences, missing paragraphs, and more. This is nothing more than a bad rough draft that was never cleaned up and edited.
Plot: you have three main plot lines that are jumbled, choppy,and not well fleshed out.
Characters: I still like them but they can't carry a book this badly put together.
I feel ripped off by the author that he published something so shoddy and I paid for it because his first series was so well done that I thought this series would have the same quality.
Fooled me. I'll read book three just because I bought all the books in this series at one time.
However if book three shows the same lack of care and quality I will drop this author for good. My hard earned money should go to authors that take price in their work and put out a worthwhile product.
1/10
Profile Image for Peter L.
12 reviews
December 2, 2018
I really wanted this book to be great and build the characters up whilst continuing to build the world and expand everything from the first book but it was just, well, frustrating in every way. I feel a little cheated (having actually bought the series) that this book is so badly written and poor. Spelling misatkes are unf0rgivable in this day and age, even sentances that are clearly just wrong can be caught by a simple word processor! It was driving me nuts that on occassion characters appeared out of thin air, references to things were mixed up, there is even one fight scene where he suddenly hits someone not taking part in the fight! amazing. This author should be ashamed of the quality of this book, it is without doubt the worst quality I've ever read. The teenager like swearing dialog was horrible to read and unbelievably 1 dimensional.

I can't think of anything all that positive to say other than this made me think "if this guy can get away with this, and I paid good money for it, and read it all, and will read the 3rd book I expect, then why the hell don't I just write a book, it'd be better than this!". So thankyou to this book for giving me confidence in myself, I'm going to get my tesla ordered now with the furute money I will make from the book I plan to write which will be better than this one if only for the reason I'll use a spell checker and re-read it to myself at least once!

I've given it 2 stars as to be fair, I did read it all and there are a few books I've not managed to get through which are more deserving of a 1 star. Really hoping the author had a new baby during this book and was writing it on 2 hours sleep a night, yes, that's what I'm going to tell myself, congrats on the baby.
Profile Image for Soo.
2,928 reviews346 followers
July 8, 2019
Mini-Review: LitRPG

3.5 Stars for Narration by Todd Menesses
4 Stars for Main Characters & Story Concepts
1.5 Stars for Uneven Pacing & Writing

I should have written the review for the first book but my experience for the two books are about the same. The narrator is good but he doesn't have a wide range for character voices and that doesn't work well with a story that has a lot of side characters. The main characters are solid. They are fully developed characters that come across well. In fact, I would say that the details for the plot, setting, etc are very well planned but the execution is a bit off. The writing doesn't have an even consistency from start to finish. Some parts are well written and others are very rough. Word choices make scenes that should have been full of energy come across as flat & boring. The series comes across as a work in progress due to chunky transitions between a well delivered scene to a rough one. I wouldn't be able to read the series in print because errors would be more obvious. It's easier to take in & enjoy in audio format.
Profile Image for XR.
1,976 reviews105 followers
September 4, 2021
Yay... my besties have saved damsels in distress and gotten stronger in smithing and alchemy!
Profile Image for Russell Gray.
658 reviews131 followers
July 4, 2019
This is pretty much a straight continuation of everything seen in the first book. The prose is really clunky and bad. I've never actually read anything else from Michael Chatfield, but considering he's a British Canadian, I can't help but develop a conspiracy theory that he has a non-English speaking friend that he lets publish under his name and everything is machine translated.

I am evidently that much of a depraved litrpg fan that despite the awkwardness of the writing, I am still enjoying the story. So much of it is cluttered, but there are still so many fairly unique things here that I can't help but continue.

Reading this series is kind of like eating at Applebee's. I think the BBQ sauce smells like body odor, but one of my friends really likes the place so I keep going and eating it and I'm just like well I guess I'm fine...haven't had diarrhea yet.
Profile Image for Markus Khul.
57 reviews2 followers
February 7, 2019
I would have given it 4 stars, but there were so many continuity errors that I just couldn't. It has somewhat become the staple of this author so I got used to it, but come on, can't you get someone to go through your book and check these things out?
Profile Image for Locuus.
78 reviews2 followers
November 26, 2018
Decemt story with A Lot of errors

This reads like an asian light novel, which I believe is intentional and that is fine.
What is not fine is that the book is full of grammatical and typographical errors. There is probably at least one on ever single page.
From bad grammar to often poor sentence structure, some wrong tenses and wrong word use, this has borrowed not only the style but the bad translation language that are so prevalent in the asian light novels. Even font sizes change in the middle of a chapter for no good reason.
I'm not even basing my rating on the repetitive word usage and contradictions found throughout the book.
It is obvious the text has not been reviewed by a professional editor, which makes this feel like a draft instead of a book published by somebody who cares about quality or wants to look professional.

The story itself still interests me, even though it is getting to be somewhat formulaic, borrowing quite a few of the main plots from the first book.
The main characters also do not grow in any way, and I do not mean stat-wise, but as people who learn, change and adapt.
Again, oh my god, the grammar. I would expect something in such a primitive state to be written by a middle schooler and not a published author.
Profile Image for Eithan  Arellius.
345 reviews
August 19, 2022
3.75 stars

Certainly a book with a vast world to traverse yet shackled by the dwarfish plot

The tale begins where it left off previously , the characters are in the Second Realm they are searching for a dungeon core but......what happens next in the plot of things is not much. It's the same story as the previous but told in a more grader proportions.

There are interpersonal relationships explored, but rather falls short on weaving it out through the plot.

It's not balanced that's all I'm gonna say


Profile Image for Moira.
1,144 reviews64 followers
September 12, 2018
31.8.2018 - 4*
I like Chatfield’s books, especially litrpg ones. I was looking on Ten Realms for some time but just few days ago actually started reading it.
The first one was behind me in matter of hours, I happily devoured it and asked for more. And lucky me, the second book was on menu in just few days.

What I love about the story the most - ex soldiers are acting like ones. And just the fact the story is told from their pov is making the books perfect for me. Other not so important details like great ideas, good worldbuilding or plotline are just cherry on top. ^^
The tiniest con which started bug me out - there are a lot of characters in the story and beside mcs, they kind of started to blur into one, at least for me. Which is weird because all of them have potencial to be more distinct.
Also, it's not really negative for me but there are lot of describing and theory in there. I love the thoughts behind it but it's true the pace of book suffered for it.
Editing is better, though. :)
Profile Image for Wilhelm Eyrich.
366 reviews26 followers
March 19, 2020
Great follow up to the first book but things seem to have slowed down and spread out a bit too much for my liking (Cultivation where you at??). All the different POVs I didn’t care about so much.

What I love about this series that I didn’t mention in the review for the first book was that blend of Chinese wuxia setting into the western LitRPG story telling. Having sects and ridiculous combat techniques along with body/mana cultivation is wonderful wuxia. It’s also nice to leave the many tropes of that genre with the accompaniment of western writing. Examples are how females are written, arrogant young masters, and “face”. All of these come up in the book but are then trampled on and it’s great to see because it’s what I always wanted to see in wuxia.

8/10 Very Good
Profile Image for Steve Naylor.
2,461 reviews127 followers
June 11, 2021
Rating 4.0 stars

Listened for the second time. I might of liked it better the second time because I skipped the parts that I didn't like that much and just listened to the parts that I liked. Mainly with Eric and Rugrat. Wouldn't have been able to do that on the first read through since with the first time you have to listen to everything since you don't know what is important.
Profile Image for Malbec.
3 reviews
October 24, 2018
This book is a bastardization of litRPG.
Wait! Hear me out, please.
I love litRPG genre with passion. Books like this one and it's sisters specialize in providing the feeling of accomplishment.
That's what RPG games are about, and that's what litRPG is mostly about, having this awesome feeling of successs, coolness or progress, that we all love, as it's main focus instead of an afterthought.
Some would call litRPG shallow, but it can, and often does, have a depth rivaling far more 'serious' books. Not this time, though.
Chatfield is good at creating litRPG, but he's not god at writing litRPG books. The feeling of progress and success is just as effective a drug as it is in my favourite books of the genre, but when you look over the abstract idea of litRPG and see the pages and text that carries it, you are stuck in a realm (pun intended) of amateur fanfiction.
Dialogues and monologues (which I sometimes struggled to distinguish), sound synthetic, and to read them in their entirety is like staring at Michael Jackson's plastic nose and hoping it gets better with age (spoilers - it doesn't). They weren't that bad in Chatfield's previous works, so I assume that his goal to have an asian theme threw a really big stick under his feet, locking him him in a culture he did not properly understand. Even though, I would still expect more than dialogues that sound as if parroted from an english translation of low budget Isekai manga.
Characters are almost not worth mentioning, perhaps only because I find funny that they yet again sound and feel as a perfect recreation of low budget Isekai tropes. You got your two MCs, who are basically like one personality and it's perfect copy side-by-side. You got their friendly teachers that they run into every now and then. You got high-ranking masters of the current region that are just big fish in small ponds, and are only there to be at awe at the double-MC of the book. And there is even a young, arrogant and rude apprentice that only gets to know the double-MC's greatness after his master points out in his eternal wisdom just how cool and awesome they are.
All of those points are quite new to Chatfield's books, as I found Emerilia far less... distracting (in a bad way).
Now to those that are, and were prevalent from the beginning.
The MC (or two of them, this time), lacks any major or believable progress in their personality, and if ever, it's only mentioned in third person, and has little influence over their actions or thoughts after that point.
Side-character stories are boring to such a degree, that I struggle to find worse examples in literature I managed to finish. Perhaps that's because they lack the only thing that this book has going for it - the feeling of progress and success.

Now, for the good parts. The worldbuilding is semi-interesting, being either really good or really boring.
Reading about both MC's progress and how they go about it is really, really interesting at times, and would be quite high on my shelf if it wasn't se in this particular book.
The MC's are against all previously mentioned odds, quite likeable, and sometimes get a good giggle out of me with their antics.

To summarize, I have developed a love/hate relationship with this book and Chatfield's works in general. It feels a bit like a Stockholm syndrome, but even though I realize the love I have for these is twisted and unnatural, I still can't quite leave them. Even though I have given up on reading this book like 4 or 5 times before finishing it, with good few days in between the attempts, I still returned in the end, even if only out of boredom.
This is not meant as a hateful message, but one where I express my irritation at what I got into. Seeing Chatfield's potential, coupled with sometimes abysmal execution, is like having the last unfinished corner of Mona Lisa done by a 7-year old child. So... please, get better.

Sincerely, someone who struggles to call himself Chatfield's fan.
Profile Image for Timothy Nugent.
Author 3 books59 followers
December 23, 2020
This is really a review of the author's writing style itself. I read this author's other series Emerilia, a couple of years ago, and lost interest about 4 books in. The series started off strong, but over time I slowly lost interest. That put me off reading this newer series, "Ten Realms" as I was afraid of the same thing happening.

This series starts off pretty strong in the first book, I rate it 4, maybe 4.5 stars. The first book is about survival and learning about the world. It is a great book and I loved it. Book 2 wasn't as good, yet I still enjoyed it. It took me longer again to get through book 3 as it kept getting bogged down by supporting characters, and Book 4, I stopped reading midway.

This author has two major issues with his books:

1. Too many side characters. I'm sorry, but I just don't care about random people. I want to read about Eric and Rugrat. You can occasionally throw in another POV, but when over half the book takes place from side characters' point of views, I get bored. This makes the pacing of the book too slow as we have lots of plot lines that most people don't care about. I found myself skimming the book way too much. I read fast, a 300 page book in 4 hours, and I love long books if the pacing is good, but this felt too slow.

2. There is no point to the series. This series has the exact same issue as the last. Why should I care? This author writes "slice of life" style books. There is no bad guy to be defeated, there is no overarching reason to grow strong. They literally just want to get to max level to see if they can because they think it'll be cool to be like gods. They are work-aholics that don't sleep and do nothing but grind their skills to make them go up, not because they have to in order to save family or friends, not in order to live or defeat pure evil. Just cause. They endure pure torture of pain to get stronger, even though there is no threat to them and they are rich enough to live like kings in their new world for the rest of their lives,


Overall, the series isn't bad at all, I just found myself coming up with reasons to not read it. Some people may like slice of life books, I do not.
Profile Image for Sydney.
1,339 reviews67 followers
April 30, 2021
3.5 Unlike The Masterful And Eargasmic AC/DC Stars

The Second Realm is the second book in The Ten Realms LitRPG series by Michael Chatfield.

The overburdened feeling of being boggled down by just too much vast amounts of information continued on in this book. While I enjoy exploring the concepts and the unique takes on themes I’ve been introduced to before, it’s hard to fully enjoy it. There may be many small confined fights and turmoils our two mcs face but there isn’t an air of intrigue and ‘must keep reading’. Honestly, in my opinion there isn’t enough action and the battles themselves can be a little contrived after a while, never truly reaching scintillating.

However, I did enjoy getting to travel with the other dungeon inhabitants as they traveled or the day to day rite happenings, as a minor break from Erik and Rugrat. The progression in the dungeon itself and theorizing happening within its halls holds my interest well. That no one thought until the last pages to consider the repeating trials that led to them being Dungeon Masters before the end of this book is surprising. I irrationally need my protagonists to be a little more all knowing and have an immediate solution for everything.

I can’t wait to see the next realms as they come, because while our heroes are so scarily strong right now they’ve yet to reach the pinnacle of true power in this world. Hopefully we’ll meet up with Old Man Hei before we run across Elder Nguyen. Finally we will get to test the true limits of Erik’s Alchemical profession, as more of a focal point in the story than compared to the weight of Rugrat’s smithing up to this point.

Re-read:
Rounding up my rating, because I honestly enjoyed this book more than the previous for the everyday minutiae. Specifically diving into the concepts, theories, and processes behind the four main specialization: Formations, Alchemy, Smithing, and Healing. I think I’m appreciating the exact opposite of my preferences from my initial read. But oh well.
Profile Image for Steve Naylor.
2,461 reviews127 followers
October 12, 2020
Rating 4.0 stars

A little different from the first book. In this book Eric and Rugrat go to the second realm to try and get a dungeon core to save their dungeon. Instead of working on their personal power/cultivation they spend most of their time working on their crafting. It was a little odd to me. It was pretty easy for them to open mana channels or temper their bodies in the first book, I couldn't understand why they put off continuing that process in this book. The two main characters are still very OP and the way they view other people and their power is not something other people in this world are accustomed to seeing. This causes a lot of problems for them. They don't really care about their appearance, politics or power struggles. In a world where power is everything, if you don't show your power you are begging to be bullied. This happens to Eric and Rugrat multiple times. People underestimate their power and mess with them, they get pissed off and then kick ass leaving people to try and figure out what happened. Overall this was a good continuation of the series.
Profile Image for R.
258 reviews18 followers
August 23, 2023
This book is not about defeating some great overlord or being the chosen one or fulfilling some prophecy.

This book is a journey of two men putting their heart into their individual passions and becoming great at what they do.
But it does not stop there. I love how even though Eric and Rugrat are worlds apart from Alva Dungeon, the storyline of Alva Dungeon does not feel flat. Eric and Rugrats aren't the only thing that's interesting anymore.

Also, is there no shortage of obnoxious lil spoiled rich brats in the ten realms?
Profile Image for Logan Horsford.
567 reviews21 followers
April 20, 2019
Still reading the second book in this good series.

The main strength of the book is that it is essentially a 'buddy cop' story with Rugrat and Eric.

Everything else is 'the minor characters'.

From the comments I've read on book three, the customers are starting to skip that which is not R&E and just reading their sections.

Hopefully, the author will take note of that and adjust.
Profile Image for James .
1,346 reviews20 followers
April 24, 2019
A fun read.

The author has continued to make sure that you are sucked into his story. The characters are interesting and the supporting characters are good. The pace is good and the action scenes are well written.
Profile Image for Taylor-Leigh Derchin.
135 reviews8 followers
January 14, 2021
This book seemed like a set up book. There was alot of set up and introduction to many new characters. I enjoyed watching the struggle of leveling up their trade skills and learning how the world really worked. I am having alot of fun reading these books.
Profile Image for Zack Clay.
103 reviews1 follower
August 31, 2021
Fantastic.

Easily one of the best litrpg series I have read. I have barely slept is 2 days. Book 3 here I come!
Profile Image for Kevin.
1,710 reviews30 followers
January 31, 2021
I had this book on my mind since finishing the first. I hope all my excitement doesn't end in disappointment.

Is this going to be a running gag? Every time they enter a city they step on someone important toes.

The same thing that happened with the author's other series is happening here. There are more point of views being continuously added, and he is turning it from a book about survival and bettering one's self into a slap shtick low IQ comedy.
Stupid fart jokes that a six year old would find funny.

I can't believe I was longing to read this book. The skeleton in this book is slowly turning into that A.I robot that made me drop the other series.

If things continue they way they are going, I will have to drop the series. I can't stomach these type of books any longer. I have other things to read that won't show me something in book one, then spit in my face in the second book.

I really don't understand this author. He writes great parts, then switches to things kids would find funny. It's like he doesn't know how to balance his books, or tell mature jokes that don't ALL depend on childish fart jokes amongst others.

This would have been better if it focused on Erik and Rugrat, and less on the people in the dungeon. They are not interesting. They are not the reason I picked up book two, it was Erik and Rugrat that made me do that.

I also noticed that the author is terrible with his time scale. He gives people time limited, but the things they accomplish in that time always seems off.

I really like the parts where Erik and Rugrat are being serious, and trying to survive or better themselves. I'm tempted to read the third book and skim or skip anything that doesn't have Erik and company.

Why do authors start these books so good, then continuously add characters no one wants to read?
Even if the author is giving some insight into what is happening elsewhere, they should keep it short, not lengthy paragraphs. It should take up less than a chapter when all the pieces are combined.

I will read the thirst book, but I will be skimming a lot when it reaches parts I'm not interested in.

Sadly I think the author will add more character POVs in the next one.

3/5 Stars
6 reviews
October 11, 2020
Good story in desperate need of editing

I very much like the plot and the world that the author is building in this series. Having read a fair amount of military fiction, fantasy, litrpg, and xianxia/wuxia novels; I like the balance that the author has struck between plot advancement and "cultivation."

My one pet peeve with this author in general, and this book specifically, is that it seems to have not been edited at all. I'm not talking about the odd misspelling or incorrect punctuation, although there are MANY examples of this, there are much more blatant mistakes which even the most cursory glance by the author or editor should have caught. Just the ones I noticed include, but are not limited to, issues like: the font and text size changing drastically from one paragraph to the next for no reason, random bolded paragraphs, missing paragraphs and sentences, nonsensical or missing exposition and descriptions, bizarre plot jumps, incorrect character names, typos including numbers such as "sp3ells," and others.

I understand and appreciate the fact that the author pumps these books out at an insane rate, and I've happily read many of his other works, but this is one of the most poorly edited novels of his that I have come across, and that's saying something.

Having gotten that off my chest, there are many redeeming qualities to this book such as a diverse and interesting character pool and a well-thought-out world/system with plenty of room for growth. I would very much recommend this series if you're the kind of person who enjoys good litrpg and can look past often immersion-breaking writing/editing to enjoy the story.


To The Author (should he read this):
Please, Please, PLEASE spend the day or two necessary to have someone read your work before publishing it. So many issues with this book could have been rectified in an hour with a properly marked manuscript. This is actually my second attempt at reading this series after seeing the "edited and revised copy" of book 1 on Kindle. Here's hoping they are better edited going forward.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
857 reviews26 followers
February 9, 2022
In this book, Erik and Rugrat are taking on the Second Realm within the Ten Realms, looking for a dungeon core that they can use to save Alva Dungeon, while also working to level themselves up and increase their skills in alchemy and smithing.

Jeez, it seems like Erik and Rugrat stir up trouble wherever they go. Admittedly, it's not usually their fault (usually), but a result of someone getting their knickers in a bunch because they think so highly of themselves that they forget there may be someone else who is stronger than they are. Oh, yeah. And, these asshats fall prey to judging the book by its cover and assume that Erik and Rugrat are weak nobodies. Not surprisingly, that assumption usually goes badly for them.

I enjoyed this book just as much as book 1. The characters continue to be developed and even though the cast of characters is growing, the author does a good job of balancing the various storylines, keeping the reader up-to-date on what's happening in all the major locations.

Though there are setbacks at various points, Erik and Rugrat continue to pursue their goals with a dogged determination that is not often seen. While I was a little disappointed with one failure - mostly because I was really hoping they would succeed - I was not really surprised by it. I look forward to seeing how things go in the next book as they explore the Third Realm. As this realm is essentially the home base for alchemists, it will be interesting to see how Erik is able to progress, and what kind of reception he is given by the Alchemist Association. At this point, the Association should have heard about the Age Rejuvenation potion that Erik developed. How will they react to it? Something tells me that it will not be smooth sailing.

If that sounds the least bit interesting to you, then I encourage you to begin reading the series. If you've already read book 1 and are trying to decide whether or not to read book 2, let me tell you this: if you enjoyed book 1, then read book 2; if you didn't enjoy book 1, then don't. Pretty simple.
Profile Image for Jake Dekker.
2 reviews
April 30, 2021
This is a simple book.

This is technically a review of the first two books. Chatfield has out together an interesting world, with 10 Realms to ascend through as you get stronger, and a system of leveling and magic that is interesting and scratches that LitRPG itch.

That's where the good ends, and why this book has two stars. This book is written in the most infuriating way possible; almost stream of consciousness at times. EVERY detail is spelled out like the reader is a moron, and repeated out loud by characters as they muse about the best course of action for an entire chapter. This book is like 700 pages and should be 300 at the very max.

The action sequences are slowed down by the explanation of WHY each person can do something, referencing their stats over and over and over again. We get it, we've seen the stats (which are also inconsistent, seriously needs better notes on what level everyone is), so sometimes characters can have a fight without explaining how the main character is fast because of his agility. We know. Seriously, we know.

There's also definitely a military fetish and obsession with their badassery that doesn't fully make sense to me in context. Our heroes are war veterans, which is a cool set-up for the series and directs their sense of morals and how they go about leveling. What doesn't make sense is that they have entered a world where people live for literally hundreds of years fighting and leveling. Why do our main characters supposedly have more combat experience that's terrifying to some of these people? Minor gripe, but it comes up often enough.

Tried not to include spoilers, but this book could have been EXCELLENT if Chatfield would just take the time to condense the text into something readable. Get an editor, or maybe just let us experience the story through dialog (very painful dialog, by the way) instead of treating us like children who can't figure out what's going on without the entire thing spelled out.
Profile Image for Gary.
675 reviews7 followers
October 20, 2025
Here is what is refreshing about this book:

It's not just page after page of dungeons and monster fights. There is an actual flow to the plot line. Yes, the characters level up in LitRPG progression fashion, but they do it in meaningful and creative ways, not just by killing everything in sight.

The characters aren't teenagers. This kind of slipped past me as being significant in book one, but an incident where they dealt with teenagers and treated them with adult consequences really made this age factor jump out. You don't realize how age limits other story progressions, until you stumble onto a book like this that isn't limited by maturity level.

I will fault this book for just one item in the opening sequence. The boys come in to Realm Two, knowing that they are underdogs and need to fit in. What do they do? They start screaming and swearing and pulling weapons on the people they came to impress. Really? I don't think so. That is just so out of character for how these two are being built. Toward the end of the story, after their power and credentials have been established - then, when they get dissed, they act cool and mature like they should have at the start of the book.

This is the second book, and the second time this series has opened with a bunch of foul language that seems out of place with the story flow. When it occurs again later in the book, it is integral to the plot and so doesn't have the same out-of-place feel as the starter tirade. Hopefully, this isn't a writer habit that will carry over to book three.

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