Just live with it, get on with your life. Always saying everything is "for Rachel". But I hate his emotional side, his living in the past, being so depressive and blaming himself the whole time. I like his character, his logic and clinical way of analysing and doing things. ![]() It's a bit weird that these books came out so late, when they're based before and during Evolution.Īnd Finn. I like how Tarot shows more about the gods, explains more about them and what they do, but the Seer just gets annoying in my opinion. I like how Daniel is used and evolves, and the Forge was an interesting twist, although it went on for too long and got repetitive. I like how the AIs are introduced in this trilogy, how they're used, and how technology is mixed in Tarot, in a medieval magic desert world. But here? With all that happens in Lahab, the dead, the catastrophes, the storm, the war, the players killed upon spawning at the mage guild. In the other books Cerillion is on top of everything, watching, monitoring, recording. Nothing more, no Cerillion Entertainment, who is monitoring and watching everything. A few chapters inside Finn's house, and a few of his memories, but that's it. Then there's also the matter of basically no story outside of AO. Just suggesting that I think is kinda not well though through. But hacking Cerillion Entertainment servers? We know from the other books how much technology Cerillion has, how much security, and what people work there. That could maybe go through if I didn't work as a systems engineer myself. Then they talk about hacking websites and forums to delete all evidence of Lahab. And how Finn takes over the staff? Way too easy and fast for what the other books showed in terms of problems. So much power he could easily have destroyed Finn's army, Lahab and probably half the continent in a blink of his eyes, and he gets messed around with that easily? It gave me the impression Travis Bagwell either ran out of ideas here or just rushed through it to get to a timeline. Then Bilel, the big bad superpowerful enemy and God hater. ![]() That easy? Oh and in Dominion Thorn says he's the leader of the Order, but here the leader seems to be Eldawin. They're so strongly against anything god related and end up being convinced by one of the gods avatars to go after Jason. But I didn't like their role in this one. Thorn and the Orders appearance surprised me, but at least we know we're they come from. On the one hand it seems slow paced compared to Jason's story, this I think is mostly noticed in this last book. So far the ending of Tarot wasn't bad, but honestly not as good as the main series. They will be reforged in the fires of adversity - forced to prove their mettle, even with the odds stacked against them.īecause soon they will face a demon king and his armies. Along the way, they'll encounter advanced magical technology, new friends and foes, and will be pushed well beyond their limits. Which will send them deep into the heart of an ancient workshop. But before they can lay siege to Lahab, Finn and his companions must first find a way to defend themselves and their fledgling army from the effects of the god relic that Bilel now wields. As the Seer predicted, the guilds and Khamsin have formed a fragile alliance. ![]() But not without a cost - including the loss of Finn's left arm and the magical corruption that now plagues his body.ĭespite those handicaps, Finn must keep pressing forward if he is to have any hope of bringing Rachael back. A demon king to kill.įinn and his companions barely escaped their encounter with Bilel.
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