Posted August 22, 2018
I've been reading litRPG lately. It's a genre of books where the hero has stats for a variety of reasons Usually, he's playing a game, usually a VR game and usually an MMO. I'm a little concerned that all these baby authors think an RPG is invariably an MMO...and few of them seem to have any idea what actually goes into making a game...and they are all very positive about in-app purchases. Kids these days.
Anyway, I've mostly been reading these because they are all Indie-published and so very cheap. I'll warn you if you go looking for these--very few of them are any good. Here are a few stand-outs:
Threadbare by Andrew Seiple: The story of a teddy bear golem that's trying to look out for his little girl owner. He is very brave and good! It's a bit like Winnie the Pooh + D&D.
Life Reset by Shemer Kuznits: This one's about a guy who is playing a VPMMORPG (of course) and gets his brain scrambled so that he has to deal with the NPC interface. Has lots of city building stuff.
Ritualist by Dakota Krout: This one has a disabled guy who decides to move permanently into a virtual world (which is of course an MMO). Lots of stats and spell creation. There is occasionally a weird fanboy-like mention of Elon Musk, but it is very rare (but very inexplicable).
Forever Fantasy Online by Rachel Aaron and Travis Bach. The main character is leading a raid in a virtual reality MMO (of course) when suddenly everything seems real. I recommend this because I liked the set piece moments a lot (see giant skeleton on the cover). But this is still the first book, so it remains to be seen if the series is good.
So, there are a lot of these in Russian as well. The translations to English when they exist are generally poorly-done. Also, these tend to have a lot of "bro" culture. However, the native English speakers often have grammar so bad that they might as well be a bad translations. And these have bro culture and/or high school drama (bleh!) too. So the Russian novels...are not worse?...for English readers.
One E. European series that has an OK translation is The Mirror World series by Alexey Osadchuk. The main character sells himself into indentured serventhood inside a VRMMORPG (of course) to pay for his daughter's medical bills. He lucks out of this and grows increasingly powerful over the course of the series (the daughter only ever gets a passing mention). The game devs, all the characters, and the game world have an amusingly bleak and mercenary view of life; it's very Rus...er...Ukrainian.
Okay, I did an excellent job of recommending these to you, didn't I! Seriously, they make excellent brain candy. So, have you read any litrpg, and if so, what are your favorites? Does the whole equating MMO to RPG thing bother you, or is that just me?
Anyway, I've mostly been reading these because they are all Indie-published and so very cheap. I'll warn you if you go looking for these--very few of them are any good. Here are a few stand-outs:
Threadbare by Andrew Seiple: The story of a teddy bear golem that's trying to look out for his little girl owner. He is very brave and good! It's a bit like Winnie the Pooh + D&D.
Life Reset by Shemer Kuznits: This one's about a guy who is playing a VPMMORPG (of course) and gets his brain scrambled so that he has to deal with the NPC interface. Has lots of city building stuff.
Ritualist by Dakota Krout: This one has a disabled guy who decides to move permanently into a virtual world (which is of course an MMO). Lots of stats and spell creation. There is occasionally a weird fanboy-like mention of Elon Musk, but it is very rare (but very inexplicable).
Forever Fantasy Online by Rachel Aaron and Travis Bach. The main character is leading a raid in a virtual reality MMO (of course) when suddenly everything seems real. I recommend this because I liked the set piece moments a lot (see giant skeleton on the cover). But this is still the first book, so it remains to be seen if the series is good.
So, there are a lot of these in Russian as well. The translations to English when they exist are generally poorly-done. Also, these tend to have a lot of "bro" culture. However, the native English speakers often have grammar so bad that they might as well be a bad translations. And these have bro culture and/or high school drama (bleh!) too. So the Russian novels...are not worse?...for English readers.
One E. European series that has an OK translation is The Mirror World series by Alexey Osadchuk. The main character sells himself into indentured serventhood inside a VRMMORPG (of course) to pay for his daughter's medical bills. He lucks out of this and grows increasingly powerful over the course of the series (the daughter only ever gets a passing mention). The game devs, all the characters, and the game world have an amusingly bleak and mercenary view of life; it's very Rus...er...Ukrainian.
Okay, I did an excellent job of recommending these to you, didn't I! Seriously, they make excellent brain candy. So, have you read any litrpg, and if so, what are your favorites? Does the whole equating MMO to RPG thing bother you, or is that just me?