The book had potential, and a few interesting things going for it, especially in the beginning. By the end, it had gone completely off the rails and escalated wildly.
Spoilers.
I have a few gripes with this story, many of which have likely been echoed all across this page. There are many instances of repetitive word choice and information, which I could ignore initially but got progressively more annoying as time went on. The main character goes through multiple different sets of abilities as the story progresses, with very few elements remaining consistent in his kit, but even those get less and less screen time as time passes.
He has busted magic time stopping powers, which he uses in interesting ways initially. He can also see into the future, but to my memory damn near never does this actively, despite having the abilities to do so from near the beginning. He accumulates a few different powers, kills a deer person, gets more cards, etc.
At some point, he decides he wants a vacation, and to hopefully find more humans. He goes on a quest, gets a giant power, and finds the city full of non-humans that are clearly enslaving the humans. This doesn't seem to bother MC, as he happily waltzes into the city. After, in a completely shocking twist, has guards try to steal his cards and force him into compliance, he goes underground, foments a revolution, leads a group of humans to freedom, then challenges the city leaders to a fight. Somehow, despite his opponent having god only knows how much of an age, wisdom, and card advantage on him, MC manages to win by going giant and punting the bird into the city.
This comes back to bite him when later, the city tracks him down, captures him, and tortures him. His initial set of powers get ripped away once a month while he's imprisoned, during which time he spends his time meditating and practicing his forms in a jail cell (Why does nobody notice the guy in his cell practicing martial arts with magic glowing claws? As it turns out, this is the standard level of security in this series.) after which he goes on to have magic stabby claws for most of the rest of the book, but use progressively less of his time abilities.
Shortly after this, he goes to a different universe/planet improves his ability t0 use magic without cards, then joins a massive organization of magic rune users, passes their exam, joins their order, undermines a magic ritual that binds him by an oath (why does nobody even consider this is possible and have failsafes or even just checks in place? What the MC can do isn't uncommon, do they just not care about infiltration? With security like this, how has rune magic not been leaked to the entire world?) then carves a rune into himself (learned perfectly in very little time/another timeskip so he can get powers without having to actually go through the process).
Following his indoctrination into the rune knights alongside his new deer-human friend, he gets shipped off to war, is immediately places in a special ops team, given mind control cards ("It's fine" his mentor thinks. "I've known this individual for like, days at most. I'm sure he won't do anything suspect with magic mind powers that have proved problematic in the past.) He's then handed extremely potent Illusion powers to yet again completely change how he fights, at which point he doesn't use his time powers for a looooooooooong time. So he's now invisible. (Again, security must be SHIT if nobody has any kind of anti-invisibility scouts who can see magic or something.)
Shortly thereafter, he begins experimenting with spatial magic via a teleportation card, and then strikes a deal with the locals that gets him an evolved spatial card that by all rights should make him damn near untouchable. Coincidentally, he's rarely ever in much danger. Also, he starts digging around in people's minds progressively more often. Admittedly, by now i'm checking out more and more, so things are blurry. Here are the highlights.
Goes digging around in people’s skulls for more information on portals, and somehow manages to perfectly interpret and memorize the memories of a portal master, then shortly thereafter successfully replicates their ability to open portals between worlds.
Sets up an interdimensional smuggling ring.
Steals a 10 griffin eggs.
Fakes his death, basically by walking away and hoping nobody really questions anything too much. By the end of the book, and the complete lack of anyone seeming to look into his disappearance, evidence suggests they didn't. (Assuming this timeline still exists, but I digress)
Goes to find his Deer person friend, who he then proceeds to realize he's in love with and is kissed by (It's basically this abrupt, yes). He proceeds to casually render the other trainee in the tent comatose with his mind magic, which Deer person barley blinks at. Following this, he near completely unveils his entire plan to deer girl, invite her to another universe with him, get rejected, then fuck for a day and a half (while continuing to keep the other person asleep with the highly suspect mind magic, again with no concern at all from deer girl.) I'll admit, I was imagining this individual with a literal deer head, so this may have influenced me to assume it wasn't going to be a romantic relationship and ignore any sighs, but it felt REALLY. RANDOM. AND. FORCED. Like every one of the other very brief romantic relationships in this book.
Anyway, with no consequences at all that we see in book 1, the natives have the Rune Knights leave their planet, use MC as a teleporter gate to kill off the enemy army, then performs an infiltration of the Rune Knights main base of operations on their world because, again, their security is shit. The only reason he gets caught is because he basically takes a mental blender to the runes locking his target’s door. There is no other indication that he was detected. After managing to kill the knight and escape with their world rune book, bag of holding, and magic rune sword, MC escapes.
Taking a small break from doing things, MC then has a small aside about being depressed, which is resolved within a minute of reading. The best way I can describe much of the character development in this book is the author telling the audience that it happened, and leaving them to fill in the gaps. Jake felt bad about killing a bunch of things. Then he went and killed a few things with minimal issues despite feeling bad about killing things. Later, he is still feeling bad about killing things, and this needs to be restated because few to none of his actions really conveyed that much about him feeling bad about killing things. He sadly loots the bag of holding, finding a portrait that made him feel bad about killing the angel, a bunch of fruit that wracked his body with agony, and a bunch of books on runes.
Anyway, he gets over his depression (with just about that much fanfare and time on the subject), hatches a baby griffin, and finishes the portal to earth. He tries to go through, but one of the oft mentioned but never actually seen gods pops up because the angel was his child, wants to punish MC, and takes a REALLY long time to actually get going on that. MC uses mind magic to successfully burrow into the mind of the god so deeply that he sees one of the core memories of the individual who would become that god, then manages to escape said god via a portal it opened and left open to a failed earth.
On failed earth, MC is sad for a while. He and his griffin eat a bunch of the pain fruit to survive for half a year, wander around, and MC decides he’ll use his temporal energy to teleport. This fails. MC gets angry, then for no reason perfectly holds the image he saw within the mind of the god, because that memory was in third person for some reason and gave him enough information to work with, and MC time travels to the location and time in the past just before the god ascended to godhood. Once there, the griffin kills and eats the soon-to-be god, MC becomes a god of time by stealing the core of power that would have ascended the now digesting would-be god, and is informed by a god dragon that the rest of the gods (not the gods that would happen, their predecessors, I think?) want to kill him. He is able to become god because, what a happy coincidence, the fruit he was eating just happened to be some kind of divine purging fruit meant to prepare someone for ascension. What luck!
This book let me down in many ways. I assumed his abilities would end up being something space-time related given his cards, and the moment he started trying to teleport with time magic I assumed time travel was on the menu. Foolishly, I assumed it would end up involving him going back to pre-transition times to try and rally the planet or something, but the one-two punch of “Oh, he can time travel all the way back to the birth of this god” and “The god is dead, MC is god” mercilessly executed any desire to continue reading this book series.
The fact that it was only within the last 1-2 hours of the audiobook that MC even got to failed earth made me think that maybe that was where book 2 would start, with him trying to survive, maybe find enough resources to upgrade his time card enough to eventually rewind back to before he was kicked into failed earth. But the sheer speed of the escalation from then on was ridiculous and rushed.
This has been a long, rambling rant. To those who read it, I’m sorry, and I hope it helped in some way if you were trying to determine if you should read this book. You may like it, and if you do I’m happy for you, but it drove me just about up a wall by the end.
All else aside, every organization in this entire book needs to SERIOUSLY rethink their security measures. How nobody before this has thought to just max out an invisibility domain and wander into places is a glaring hole in anything this series may have tried to offer.