Steven C. (SteveTheDM) - , reviewed Ready Player One (Ready Player One, Bk 1) on + 204 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
One of the other reviews I read for this book called it "Nostalgia Porn" and that seems like a hugely accurate descriptor. If you're actually in the set of people to whom that nostalgia resonates, this book is fantastic. If you're a young teen who likes hunt for treasure stories, you'll probably like it too.
This is the story of a hunt in virtual reality through 1980s video games and movies. A rather desperate hunt actually, in a fascinating virtual world and in a devastated real world. There are puzzles, which are fun (and which I was quite proud of solving faster than the protagonist), and there is a light touching of the deeper philosophical implications of a populace that spends most of it's time (both leisure and work) in a virtual landscape.
If you aren't a 1980s geek, this book may have very little for you. But if you played old text adventures between your Dungeons & Dragons games, you are smack dab in the middle of this book's target demographic and will probably have a great time. Those descriptor certainly describe me, and I absolutely did have a great time. (And for what it's worth, my teenage, treasure-hunting son loved it too.)
5 of 5 stars.
This is the story of a hunt in virtual reality through 1980s video games and movies. A rather desperate hunt actually, in a fascinating virtual world and in a devastated real world. There are puzzles, which are fun (and which I was quite proud of solving faster than the protagonist), and there is a light touching of the deeper philosophical implications of a populace that spends most of it's time (both leisure and work) in a virtual landscape.
If you aren't a 1980s geek, this book may have very little for you. But if you played old text adventures between your Dungeons & Dragons games, you are smack dab in the middle of this book's target demographic and will probably have a great time. Those descriptor certainly describe me, and I absolutely did have a great time. (And for what it's worth, my teenage, treasure-hunting son loved it too.)
5 of 5 stars.
Kristin K. (escapeartistk) - reviewed Ready Player One (Ready Player One, Bk 1) on + 207 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
This is a fun book if you like rooting for the underdog and if you recognize the 80s references (which you will if you lived through them: PacMan, Devo, etc). Its not particularly well written, but its not too techie either, so the lay-reader like myself can follow the plot easily.
Dawn B. (stargazingbookworm) - , reviewed Ready Player One (Ready Player One, Bk 1) on + 29 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
This is a rip roaring ride - an Indiana Jones gauntlet of thrills.
If you are a nerd, geek, Trekkie, sci-fi junkie, bookworm, 80's (and 70's or before) movie, TV-show and music aficionado - than this book is for you. (Which is the reason I only gave it 4 1/2 stars - not everyone is...). Its the perfect book for summer reading.
Instead of living in the real world - which is awful and shows signs of what we are going through right now (2020) - everyone and I mean everyone lives in the OASIS - a virtual holo-deck of gaming where you are in the video games. Kids go to school in the OASIS (Online learning sound familiar?), people shop, its where all go to win instead of live. A place where anything that you might really have of any value gets sold to get more time in the game.
The creator, well one of them, dies and instead of bequeathing his vast fortune to his now ex-partner in the OASIS, he leaves a game - a winner takes all game - leaving hidden eggs and gates. If you are the last one standing then you are mega-rich and own the OASIS and control all of it. Throw in a few high school students that only know each other by their avatars, a rich cooperate company that owns everything else and also wants the OASIS and a bunch of geeky people trying to save it.
If you are a nerd, geek, Trekkie, sci-fi junkie, bookworm, 80's (and 70's or before) movie, TV-show and music aficionado - than this book is for you. (Which is the reason I only gave it 4 1/2 stars - not everyone is...). Its the perfect book for summer reading.
Instead of living in the real world - which is awful and shows signs of what we are going through right now (2020) - everyone and I mean everyone lives in the OASIS - a virtual holo-deck of gaming where you are in the video games. Kids go to school in the OASIS (Online learning sound familiar?), people shop, its where all go to win instead of live. A place where anything that you might really have of any value gets sold to get more time in the game.
The creator, well one of them, dies and instead of bequeathing his vast fortune to his now ex-partner in the OASIS, he leaves a game - a winner takes all game - leaving hidden eggs and gates. If you are the last one standing then you are mega-rich and own the OASIS and control all of it. Throw in a few high school students that only know each other by their avatars, a rich cooperate company that owns everything else and also wants the OASIS and a bunch of geeky people trying to save it.