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Sky Lord: The Complete Series

An Isekai Fantasy Adventure

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Sky Lord: The Complete Series

By: Jack Bryce
Narrated by: Richard Brock, Raya Kane
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The complete series in a single offering!

Magic is real—all the myths and legends of mankind come from a place that actually exists. And Jonathan is about to go there…

The world of Skyhall awaits, unlocked by a mysterious inheritance from Jonathan’s eccentric, adventuring uncle. The threats are legion—dungeons, undead, wyverns, and beastfolk—but Jonathan has a unique class that will give him the power to expand and improve his own airship. In time, he will turn it into a veritable fortress and flying palace.

Also, he won’t be going to Skyhall alone. His high school crush, Mackenzie—who has had a serious glow-up—will be joining him. And who knows who else Jonathan will meet on his journeys to complete his adventuring party?

©2024 Jack Bryce (P)2026 Royal Guard Publishing LLC
Action & Adventure Anthologies & Short Stories Fantasy
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Pretty standard ‘chosen one’ isekai fare, but enjoyable nonetheless. The sky ships angle is a new one, but other than a couple of moments of peril (both pretty similar) across the whole series, it doesn’t really make much of a difference to the story. When asked about the logic of this (what happens if you fall, it’s there eventually a ground?), two of the characters native to the world can’t even understand the question - which makes some sense in world, but the Earth MC just shrugs this off and never gives it another thought. And the baritone suffers from a similar sort of approach: there’s a lot of Problem>Solution>Character Time, repeat. Rarely does it feel like a character’s actions has unforeseen ramifications or even ‘lose’ at all, and generally it just feels like luck/fate is always on their side.
But that disappointment aside, the frustrating part is intermittent production issues. They aren’t frequent enough to ruin the book, but can take you out of the experience: voice actors mispronouncing/confusing words (e.g. ‘weary’ vs ‘wary’), emphasising/not emphasising words in odd ways, and sometimes a character’s dialogue response is just missing from the recording.
All that said, the story is generally enjoyable. The characters are likeable enough, if lacking depth, and overall the story is fun. As long as you don’t pick it up expect a highly polished production or layered story, and look to enjoy it for what it is, it’s pretty decent overall.

Good story marred by some production issues

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