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A Record of Ash & Ruin: The Grieving Lands by Mesa

Not everyone can be chosen, and not all can become heroes.

Our protagonist is ripped... Read more
Not everyone can be chosen, and not all can become heroes.

Our protagonist is ripped from his comfortable life on Earth into a world of fantasy and magic reminiscent of the roleplaying games he once enjoyed. Chosen by the Goddess of Justice Avaria, he draws the attention of an even more ancient and puissant power who seizes him for his own dark designs.

Alone and disorientated, he must quickly learn to survive in a cruel world where the rules and structures of his old life have shifted entirely. He will confront strange alien creatures, brave a terrifying hostile environment, and assimilate his own skills and abilities as he tries to get a grip on his newfound reality.

I am writing this story with my vision of a LitRPG where, dare I say it, everything is a little more realistic. Our protagonist starts at the lowest possible rung. Levels are gained slowly and with much sacrifice. He has no access to conveniences such as instant language learning, internal maps, or clear explanations for skills and abilities.

I want to explore human nature when pushed to the extremes in a place where justice is determined by one’s martial skill and strength in magic. What does such an environment reveal about the nature of heroes and villains? What is the value of human life when the central character is unclear whether the world he is in is truly real? Collapse
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Comments 12

  1. Offline
    Magesh Raj learner
    10
    A really good novel but I am just wondering whether the characters development has gone too quickly he may be slaved but he kills everyone I can accept some kills as it might be better for him to do that but just killing passerby and child when using the drain spell, anyone who had lived in modern times won't kill people when there is nothing to gain even if they became a bit crazy
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  2. Online Offline
    kiwi
    1211
    I'll answer one of the author's questions: The value of human life is directly equal to how many resources (be it time, money or something else) were invested into it. So a human newborn is worth jack shit.
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    1. Offline
      Sujay
      100
      Honestly it depends on from whose perspective you're seeing it .
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    2. Online Offline
      kiwi
      186
      Actually I was wrong. A newborn is worth a couple hundred thousand. Organs are expensive.
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      1. Offline
        Addict
        00
        When a infertile billionaire invest in ivf, that newborn is worth millions
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    3. Offline
      tteokbokki
      01
      But newborns are usually treated and respected more than adults with no value due to the newborns able to later give their value back through actions that later feed back the money into the economy (damn this is a dark way of thinking huh)
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  3. Offline
    ainz
    11
    A 5/5 novel in my book. A realy good read.
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  4. Offline
    OverLord
    10
    This one is surprisingly good, a bit dark tho.
    4.3/5
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  5. Offline
    Gott-höchste
    84
    Realistic my balls!
    Rank: C-
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    1. Offline
      God_Unknown
      10
      Cara, eu só encontrei você dando rank C para várias novels, por acaso é o único rank que você conhece, lol?!
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      1. Offline
        Gott-höchste
        61
        haha, rank C depending on the + or - has a big difference lol. but, yes, I've evaluated it with other ranks too, it's not every day that I find B or A rank novels
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      2. Online Offline
        Karmic_daoist
        10
        Lmao
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