Level One God 3
A LitRPG Adventure
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3 Months Free + £10 Audible voucher
Buy Now for £22.43
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Narrated by:
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John Pirhalla
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By:
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Zachary Scott
The world doesn't know about him yet. It will soon.
The Iron Rank nobody who somehow took down an Eclipsed and cleared a doomed dungeon. The man mad enough to claim a cursed accomplishment reward. The man nobody realizes was once one of the nine forgotten gods.
Brynn is climbing back to his former power faster than anyone could have imagined. But he doesn’t have the luxury of taking his time.
So when he learns Thrask is hosting a Grand Tournament with grander rewards, he enters. Even knowing it's a tournament only the nobility are meant to win. Even knowing the game is rigged.
An old rival will join the ranks, waiting for his moment to strike. New enemies will converge with the game-makers at their backs. Unlikely allies will risk everything to rally to his cause. And far above it all, in a crystal court that hangs above the clouds, a mad god will hear a name he hasn't heard in a very, very long time…
Brynn Stygos.
Book 3 of an action-packed LitRPG progression fantasy filled with creative class systems, accomplishment-based loot, and a growing cast of lovable misfit allies, pets, and creatures.
Perfect for fans of the gritty stakes and twisted charm of Dungeon Crawler Carl, the cosmic progression and rich world-building of He Who Fights With Monsters, and the deep systems and satisfying grind of Defiance of the Fall!
My only major gripe is the morale of the MC. There are several times it's like: "I'm getting ambushed by assassins who will kill me, my friends and indirectly lead to the end of the world. But just let me not use my powers and be careful and kind. Cant kill ppl because killing is wrong, and I want to be good and have good morals and be ethical". It just feels so wrong and breaks immersion for me. Like in the early Marvel films when Hulk went smash, but they wanted PG13 so you had to see everyone climb out of every smashed tank and exploding helicopter. "Cant have anyone dying, that's bad". I find it a shame as everything else is defenitly to my liking. But that part feels artificial and disruptive. Luckily not too much of it, but very obvious when it happens. It's like the author reminds himself that every once in a while he have to make a point of morale and the MC beeing good,
fun read, but feels like it's written for YA
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