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Revered Insanity promises a descent into madness, but delivers a chaotic stew of clichés, melodrama, and repetitive power-ups. The protagonist broods more than he breathes, the plot chases its own tail, and the world-building is a cluttered mess of half-baked ideas and vague mysteries. It’s less a tale of insanity and more a test of the reader’s patience — one long grind with all the depth of a puddle and none of the payoff.
luck
fried momo
Sucks big time
·reviewed Lord of the Mysteries
Lord of the Mysteries is like if Lovecraft decided to start a Victorian-era blog but forgot how to write anything under 100 pages without losing his mind. It’s a never-ending slog through endless exposition dumps, philosophical monologues, and mood swings so intense you’d think the author was channelling every existential crisis ever recorded. The pacing crawls slower than a corpse dragging itself through quicksand, and the plot twists feel less like surprises and more like a drunk tarot reader wildly guessing their own future. Klein, the protagonist, isn’t a mastermind or a hero — he’s an emotionally exhausted introvert desperately trying to make sense of a universe that clearly hates him. Every character feels like a walking encyclopedia entry for some obscure occult fact nobody asked for, and the world-building? So bloated and inconsistent it’s like the author Googled ‘mystery’ and slapped together whatever buzzwords sounded cool without caring if they made sense. The cults and secret societies are so convoluted you’d need a PhD just to follow the fan theories, and half the time it feels like the story is punishing readers for daring to keep up. It’s less a novel and more an endurance test — the kind where you start questioning your life choices halfway through chapter 300 and never recover. If you want a dark, twisty, cerebral read, maybe pick something shorter. If you want Lord of the Mysteries, prepare for a slow descent into madness disguised as high literature.
luck
fried momo
Kinda bad
·reviewed Shadow Slave
Reading Shadow Slave is like stumbling into a nightmare where every villain is a walking plot device, every ally is a walking cliché, and the protagonist is a walking disaster. It's as if the author threw a bunch of fantasy tropes into a blender, hit 'puree,' and served it as a smoothie of mediocrity. The world-building is as deep as a puddle, the character development is as flat as a pancake, and the pacing is slower than a snail on tranquilizers. If you're looking for a story that redefines the meaning of 'wasted potential,' look no further.
luck