
Meet Your Maker Volume 1
An Epic Fantasy LitRPG
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Narrado por:
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Johnathan McClain
From the imaginations of Seth McDuffee, author of the bestselling Big Sneaky Barbarian books, and award-winning screenwriter and audiobook narrator Johnathan McClain comes a new series that answers the question . . .
"What would happen if you crossed the high fantasy of Wheel of Time with the irreverent comedy of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?"
Bruce Silver is the author of the Riftbreaker novels, one of the most popular, beloved fantasy book series of all time. He's got everything he's ever dreamed of having: freedom to tell the stories he wants to tell, legions of enthusiastic fans who wait eagerly to see what he'll write next, and a really nice car.
But despite all that, Bruce finds himself dissatisfied, battling an ennui he can't quite put his finger on. So he decides to do what anyone would do in his situation: burn it all down by unexpectedly killing off Carpathian Einzgear, Riftbreaker's cherished hero. A solid plan with absolutely no downside whatsoever.
Until . . .
Bruce wakes up to find himself suddenly transported inside the world of the novels he's written. And . . . seen by everyone he encounters as Carpathian Einzgear himself. Which is problematic for a variety of reasons, not least of which being that, when Carpathian died, he left behind a sea of destruction, broken promises, and shattered lives that Bruce is now responsible for repairing—only, without access to all the powers and skills Carpathian built up through the course of ten books. Bruce is going to have to start over at the beginning.
Meet Your Maker is a comedic, epic fantasy series that asks the questions: What is fiction? What is reality? And does it make a difference, when everyone and everything is trying to kill you?
Bruce created this world. Now he has to survive it.
©2024 Seth McDuffee and Johnathan McClain (P)2024 Podium AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
“Everything I wanted and more. So much more. . . . [Meet Your Maker] will stay with you long after the final page.” —Amie Kaufman, New York Times–bestselling author the Isles of the Gods
“F***ing incredible. Wild to see two talented voices come together and produce something so seamless. Truly next level.” —Kyle Kirrin, author of the Ripple System
“A rare book that makes you laugh, draws you in with intrigue, then holds up a mirror to your own subconscious. I wish I’d written it.” —Haylock Jobson, author of Heretical Fishing
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can't finish
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The onomatopeioas... look... we don't need the narrator doing his best chainsaw impression every time someone fires up their rip saw. Once is enough. The lion rat hybrid shouting the main character's name so much also got old very quickly. I know it was supposed to be something that inspired fear in the listeners as much as the main character, but it misses the mark after the first encounter.
This is not a big thing, but there was one pop culture reference in the Candy Shoppe that irked me as a Star Trek fan. Seven of Nine and her alcove were on Star Trek Voyager not Star Trek Deep Space Nine.
Promising start but just kind of wore on me as it went on.
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A great new entry
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No doubt this came up because of a combination your search history (not commenting on that), media intake, and purchase history, all culminating to leading you to this book, which you are trying to figure out if it’s worth the credit.
The description fits it well, pop culture references, humor, Litrpg, meta as all get out.
If you are not familiar with the narration of Johnathan McClain or Seth McDuffee’s writing style, then I’m almost envious about the decision and subsequent experience you are about to have.
They are both, and I cannot stress this enough, amazing. Diverse in character construction and representation, this is my favorite series to listen too since Noobtown, or He Who Fights with Monsters. I wasn’t absorb it all in one go, I’m going to be re-istening to this when I’m able to focus on it completely because the some of the dialogue and narration hits different parts of my appreciation in different ways, but so close together that I know I missed something.
This is worth the credit
What I’m here for, what you are here for
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If you have one credit to spend on LitRPG this year, it should be on this book !
Delightfully creative and so funny it’ll make you leak
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The moments were done well enough to inspire my own creativity
Very animated, a little loud and annoying at brief moments, but gooood.
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Its pretty ok. Far from great
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I can't do the overacted screaming in this
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However, as the book progressed, the author’s writing style became increasingly verbose. When describing situations, character details, or other elements, the narrative often used four to five descriptive statements, only to circle back and simplify with a phrase such as "basically like this..." It made the experience feel unnecessarily drawn out. As if the only purpose of the characters were to be described. While I appreciate rich, descriptive prose, the constant over-explanation grew exhausting, and at times, I found myself more caught up in waiting for the lengthy descriptions to end rather than in the story itself.
What also frustrated me was that the book was labeled as a LitRPG, but the RPG elements were lacking. Instead of true progression or meaningful game-like mechanics, it mostly made references without incorporating the kind of RPG progression that the genre typically provides. Without that sense of growth, it felt more like a story with gaming nods rather than a full LitRPG experience.
That said, the characters and overall plot are still strong enough to make the book enjoyable, and the humor and creativity were delightful. Overall, this is an engaging story, and while I believe it could benefit from more concise storytelling, you may appreciate the depth and detail the author provides.
Engaging Story with Humor, but Lacking in RPG
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it wasn't really what I wanted
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