Reddit Reddit reviews Dungeon Lord (The Wraith's Haunt - A litRPG series Book 1)

We found 5 Reddit comments about Dungeon Lord (The Wraith's Haunt - A litRPG series Book 1). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Literature & Fiction
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Dark Fantasy
Genre Literature & Fiction
Dungeon Lord (The Wraith's Haunt - A litRPG series Book 1)
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5 Reddit comments about Dungeon Lord (The Wraith's Haunt - A litRPG series Book 1):

u/Lightwavers · 32 pointsr/litrpg

The Dungeon Lord name kept me from reading the series for quite a while. The format of common noun + common noun usually heralds nothing good, but while the series is pretty mediocre, it's top-tier LitRPG because most LitRPG is trash.

For a while, I didn't read Mother of Learning, as the title puts me in mind of those translated light novels that are always rendered in broken, over the top, anime style English. The opening paragraphs and even the first chapter aren't really anything remarkable either, but once the story gets going it gets really good.

u/ActiveAbility · 12 pointsr/litrpg

I'd recommend Hugo Huesca's Dungeon Lord. It hits all/most of your likes, and very few/any of your dislikes.

u/TheColourOfHeartache · 7 pointsr/Fantasy

Despite being a heavy litRPG reader I'm probably not the person to ask due to my highly idiosyncratic tastes (I mostly avoid books set in VR for example) I recommend the following:

  • Worth the Candle: This webfic is more literature than most non-litRPG fantasy. With deep themes of ethics, free will, and mental health. There aren't many fantasy books where the protagonist attending therapy would take an entire chapter, let alone be an amazing.
  • Dungeon Lord. Mechanically it's sort of a hybrid of litRPG and regular fantasy. You earn exp and spend them on talents; but when talents aren't in play the world runs on regular physics and biology. It's a portal story about an ordinary man gaining the powers gaining Sauron like powers and trying to maintain his morality while building/running a kingdom and fighting a war.
  • Forever Fantasy Online: I'm not sure whether to put this as litRPG or not. It's a sucked into a video game story, but the video game reality has become actual reality. Health points don't exist, nobody gains exp. However there's a strongly World of Warcraft inspired magic system, and Tank/DPS/Healer are valid combat strategies. FFO is probably the one that feels most authentic to a computer RPG. And it nails the basics like plot, charachter, and prose.
u/BigIron60T · 2 pointsr/litrpg

Dungeon Lord might be worth looking into.

u/FunkyCredo · 1 pointr/litrpg

I am on the lookout for things to read myself
I am on mobile so horrible formatting incoming

From litrpg top picks are:

  1. Ascend Online by Luke Chmilenko. Very well rounded and balanced read

  2. Completionist Chronicles by dakota krout. Protagonist is quite OP here

  3. The Land by Aleron Kong (only as audiobook). This is a controversial pick because Aleron Kong is a) complete and total dick b) his writing is quite weak and amateurish. However as an audiobook The Land is awesome due to its narrator. Also Aleron probably does the best job of world and base building. Main character is crazy OP here and getting more OP with each book

  4. Divine Dungeon by Dakota Krout. A litrpg from the perspective of a dungeon. Fun and different from others

  5. Dungeon Lord

    From fantasy in general

  6. Cradle series which I already mentioned. Its like drugs in book format

  7. Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson . This is a 10/10 Epic story. Think on the scope of Lord of the Rings. Also I can recommend anything by Brandon Sanderson

  8. Wings of war. Amazing and brutal. Many beloved characters die and suffer horribly despite expectations, different from other books out there

    Sci-fi

  9. Starship mage series

  10. Terran Privateer series

  11. Vigilante series

    Too lazy to remember more at this point