I made it’s the third book in this series with the hope that the character would become in not only less entangled with I love all of the beings that have been. I’ve been trying to kill him since the very beginning. What the writer calls powers? And in the very thin, hope that the player would become more intelligent…

I was incorrect on both. The player is still making the exact same type of mistakes. He was making at the very beginning of the story. It’s impossible for him to learn anything…He refuses to grow. you’re not reading a book about a character. You’re reading a book about what a character does, because the gods or powers as they’re referred to make him do so, the book doesn’t ever give you what you want. Not even a little bit the book basically makes you sit through everything and watch him just basically destroy himself and lose all of his progression.

Imagine playing a video game like an mmo, and every time that you die, you lose everything that you have and have to start over from basically level 0. that’s pretty much what this is like because of the attention to detail to wealth and to material items and on that note, you can definitely tell the writer is very against any class in traditional Dungeons & Dragons or rpgs that has anything to do with it with items or gear. He insists on only focusing on magic or the abilities that the character has and doesn’t create a well-rounded character.

He’s not even a glass cannon. He’s a glass needle and the only way that he wins his fights is either through subterfuge or pure luck. we haven’t even addressed the issue about the wolves since the first book, other than basically hinting towards something that this guy might become. But we have to sit through and watch this character just basically become an absolute laugh. Riot and failure every single time. i don’t know how this book got a 4.8 rating. I don’t get it, but it came highly recommended. And I have to say, I’m thoroughly disappointed.