Dawn of the Density God
Density God, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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J. S. Arquin
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By:
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ToraAKR
About this listen
Madra: A planet stuck on hard mode set to devour everyone on its surface.
Jiran is just a child when he receives shattered, imperfect memories of a past life. Nestled inside these emotionless visions is a magic very different to the density and mana he knows, the magic of science.
The empire stands alone against the relentless beasts of Madra. Their only means of survival is harnessing the density that saturates her surface, a magic they cannot possibly understand. Will Jiran realize he holds the key to unlocking humanity's infinite potential before they are all wiped out?
A slow burn cultivation LitRPG with a magic system that will blow your socks off—or your arm, or both your legs. Who knew magic + science could be so explosive?
©2023 ToraAKR (P)2024 Dreamscape LoreWhat listeners say about Dawn of the Density God
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Performance
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- Amazon Customer
- 21-07-24
Love it
Yes, I love this book, the story and the narration is so good. It’s just fantastic.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Ben
- 21-01-25
A bit of a mess.
The story is somewhat interesting. Following a child of seven at the start who suddenly gets the mind of an adult in a world of a rather unusual magic system that seems to want to kill him. The premise isn't novel, and the world is a little flat. At the start, it has a logic to it, but it goes off the deep end trying to explain away every little thing in a way that causes said logic to unravel. Still, it tries, and the story does look to be going somewhere. The somewhat convoluted world lore is not why I give the story 3 stars. It's the pacing and wild commentary. The very moment something interesting starts to occur, be it an interaction, a fight, or the exploration of a new place. It doesn't matter. One of two things will happen. We immediately either skip on from it with a cursory look, or a distraction talking about something that's already been talked about, come back to the main subject before off on a tangent again. At one point in the book, we were treated to the same bit of information repeated back to us around five times in the one chapter. Yes, that's an exaggeration because I honestly can't be bothered going back and actually counting, but the point is valid.
Anyway, while annoying, it's not my biggest gripe. No. By far my biggest gripe with this book- and I suspect the series as my completion-ist self will get the next book, is the narration. Oh, my. Could they make the character sound more whinny if they tried? Seriously. It's a genuine question. I understand that the dialogue in points makes him seem whiny, and at the start he's seven years old, but this is over the top. I've honestly considered switching to reading instead. I've other books from this narrator, so I know they're capable of better, so this must be deliberate. I just can't understand why they WANT to give the listeners a headache. Also, somehow, 1.6x seems to be the right speed to listen to this... So that's another oddity.
Overall, it's worth a credit if you have nothing else on your list to listen to. I do not have high expectations of the series.
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