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17 pages, Audible Audio
First published November 1, 2019
⭐⭐⭐⚝⚝ (3 / 5)
What if the villain’s path wasn’t about domination — but survival?
Ember, the first entry in the Awaken Online: Tarot spinoff, shifts the spotlight away from Jason and into the shadows of a new antihero. This isn’t just an expansion of the Awaken Online universe — it’s a tonal recalibration. Darker. More personal. More morally suffocating.
The novel follows Finn Harris, a bullied, socially isolated teenager whose real life is crumbling under abuse and neglect. When he enters the VR world of Awaken Online, he doesn’t seek glory. He seeks escape. What he finds instead is a path aligned with destruction — the Tarot class Ember, built around chaos, fire, and psychological warfare.
Bagwell excels at portraying emotional fragility. Finn isn’t charismatic in the traditional LitRPG sense. He’s angry, traumatized, reactive. His descent into darker choices feels less like a villain origin story and more like a pressure valve slowly giving way. That psychological grounding is what elevates Ember above standard power progression.
Where the book burns brightest:
Psychological Realism — Finn’s motivations are rooted in believable pain.
Morally Gray Progression — Power comes at emotional cost.
Expanded Worldbuilding — The Tarot mechanics deepen the Awaken Online mythos.
The Ember class is a compelling addition to the system. Unlike straightforward combat roles, it thrives on manipulation, fear, and staged devastation. Combat encounters emphasize strategy and psychological edge rather than brute stats. The Tarot system feels mythic and ominous, hinting at larger cosmic forces influencing player destinies.
What makes Ember particularly gripping is its dual narrative tension — the in-game rise versus the real-world collapse. Finn’s external life deteriorates even as his avatar grows stronger. That contrast reinforces one of the series’ core questions: does virtual empowerment heal real trauma, or simply mask it?
However, the heavy focus on bullying and abuse can feel emotionally relentless. Some readers may find the real-world sections difficult or repetitive. The pacing occasionally slows under the weight of internal monologue, especially during Finn’s darker spirals.
Compared to the main Awaken Online arc, Ember is more intimate and less politically expansive. It trades large-scale faction warfare for personal vendetta and internal reckoning. The stakes are smaller in scope but sharper in emotional intensity.
Thematically, the novel explores:
Power as Coping Mechanism
Isolation and Identity
The Seduction of Destruction
By the end, Finn’s transformation feels earned but unsettling. He doesn’t become a hero. He becomes something harder to define — a reflection of what happens when anger finally finds an outlet.
Ember isn’t a comfortable read.
It’s a smoldering one.
And once it catches, it refuses to burn quietly.