Kazar has fallen. All that is left of the border city is a caravan of refugees skirting the edge of the deadlands and the dangers that lurk there. The situation is grim but Viv is not done for. The Kazarans are alive and looking for revenge, and Viv? She has all the tools to provide it.
This was another enjoyable volume, though one without a singular sense of climax compared to the previous two.
While I have no complaints about the pacing, this was the first volume that reminded me that the story was originally a serial. The plot was mostly bridging the aftereffects of Book 2's conclusion and connecting it to the wider geopolitical issues and the trouble likely coming in Book 4.
In the meantime, this volume expands what we know of the magic by introducing a bit more info on paths as well as showing Viv develop her magic skills further. We also get a bit more info on some of the pantheon and their influence.
All in all, I don't have a lot to say about this one. I enjoyed it as I was reading it, but there weren't really any standalone highlights. It was a steady development of plot, setting, and character. As far as table-setting books go, this one still felt pretty good as we constantly got introduced to new characters or information. I'm looking forward to where the next book takes things.
It is unfortunate when series come from RoyalRoad which are poorly paced, poorly written, and either slightly-to-terribly misogynistic. But not so with The Calamitous Bob!
An excellent series that follows a female MC, The Calamitous Bob is a tale filled with goodness, inclusivity, and the cutest dragon. (All Hail Arthur!)
The third book continues the trend and I continue to highly recommend!
That's sort of impressive for something with two pitched battles, a few other big fights, and the discovery of a magic no one thought could be done on Nyil. This book has its moments (mostly to do with Arthur), but overall it consists of a few set piece battles which are lacklustre at best, strapped together with a lot of mundanity. You can sort of tell when the author thought things were getting too boring: suddenly there's a boss fight for no other reason than that nothing's happened for three chapters. This book starts out mundane, continues to be mostly boring, and then ends incredibly abruptly for no apparent reason.
This book's pet peeve is 'traits.' "You use that word a lot. I do not think it means what you think it means." What does the author think a trait is. It seems like it's some facial feature. I've been wondering for three books, but this time 'her traits were emaciated' came up and I have no idea what that's supposed to mean! To make matters worse, English got traits as a lone word from French, so it's not like the author can be misunderstanding what a trait is. If anyone can explain this to me, please do.
I don't think I'll be reading the next book any time soon. It feels like the author has got a bit bored of writing the web series. The earlier books handled combat well and had more humour. This one is just kind of tedious.
While the initial book were a bit more focused, this one just.. isn't. It's a somewhat interesting story told in an exceedingly boring way if that makes sense.
At a high level I think that the issue is of depth... This book doesn't really dive into ANY topic at depth and instead dabbles in every topic shallowly. Examples?
● Every few chapters Viv seems to get a power-up, but the actual training is off-screened 90% of the time. No real details are given for Viv's new understanding of magic or how it works. ● The character motivations and rational has been slowly dissolving over the books, and there really isn't an end goal here besides "Prince bad/retribution". Viv has never expressed an interest in being a leader, yet she becomes one and seems to just roll with it.... ● Outside of motivations, the characters personalities seem to have solidified and there is no real growth happening for anyone besides the pet, and the dragons growth is mostly there for comedic relief. ● Politics plays a big part of the story in this book, but talking about politics is generally avoided and the MC mostly delegates or off-screens it. Which is exactly the opposite of how political intrigue concepts work. The result is just mediocre hand-waving that is boring to read.
I have more complaints, but I'm just gonna end it with this... The book is fine, but does not excel in any particular area.
Her magic is a little too boring. What started as a potentially interesting magic system and world has grown stale. For a world where everyone has at least some magic, we see very little of it. To make matters worst, all the MC can do is destroy stuff. The author hinted at other uses and aspects of her power ( you see it for healing) but ultimately her magic is lame. It’s not even offset by interesting magics around her. Kudos to the author for keeping her progression realistic, but it’s honestly not enough to entertain.
4.5 stars Really enjoyed this installment. I think this is definitely my favorite series that has done the lit-rpg sort of slowly gaining more power and influence as we go style of book. The writing gets better and more engaging in my opinion with every book. The pacing is a bit wobbly at times but I enjoy the characters every time I read more about them (especially Solfis) so it doesn't bother me as much. Still love this author's work so so much
This was another great addition to the series that I very much enjoyed, and I’m really curious on how the main character will grow in both power and skill. I do wish that she used some of her abilities, a bit more creatively, such as a shotgun, like blast, or a condensed black mana shot to act as a sniper shot. But overall, really love the story.
I couldn't wait for book four, I've already started it which is fairly unheard of for me.
Another fantastic installment in this series. Alex Gilbert continues to grow as a writer, which I love seeing. I'm also loving how Viv is developing and how Solfis's own plan maybe be coming to fruition.
This is an interesting set of books. At first I thought that it would be elementary and not up to pare. I took a chance and found them full of interesting characters, action, and the baby dragon is not your cute little baby. The set starts slow but gets better over time. These books are well worth your time.
And here we go. We have: 1. Stakes 2. Interesting characters who don't just serve one purpose 3. Unconventional storytelling using multiple perspectives 4. A likeable MC...who is not a Mary Sue 5. A most unconventional interpretation of isekai
Yep, I am definitely enjoying the ride and now I'm locked in.
Features a lot of political intrigue and battles as a new nation slowly shapes up at the peak of the civil war between the two countries it split from. Viv will definitely get that Genocidal Maniac skill sooner rather than later...
This is an entertaining ramble of a tale. It follows the story of Viv who is transported from her mundane life on Earth to a world where she can use magic. She has adventures. She makes friends. She gets involved in stuff. It's delightfully fun.
An intense journey for Viv as she fights for the displaced Citizens of Kazar while deeply grieving her lost partner. You really start to see Viv’s extreme commitment to vengeance, which, as a reader, is very fun to follow.
I enjoyed his vampire story with Arianne. And, I enjoy this one because the people in the story don't seem to act in a contrived way. Finished the book in three days during work.
I think this was about the point in the series where I realised that the author really knew what they were doing. One of the few webnovel/online writers who really seems to get it.
After devouring the first 3 books in a 24hr span I'm forcing myself to not buy any more until I've read more of my pre-existing backlog. But I'm certainly hooked.