Reviews tagging 'Sexual violence'

Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman

3 reviews

katie_holder's review against another edition

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adventurous slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.0

I HATED THIS BOOK!

I question if the author hates women? The misogyny was real. The references were absurd and offensive. Also I hate video games and I double hate books written like a video game (new hate unlocked) I definitely was not the target audience, the target audience would be the men incels who talk about hating women while simultaneously wondering why they can’t find a woman. This book was torture.

I only finished this because of book club, I like going to book club. Also the reason why I rated this a 2 star book was because the audiobook production was fantastic. I will not be continuing this series. 

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heysunbee's review against another edition

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adventurous dark funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted relaxing medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

Grimdark but add a touch of humor and a talking cat with the sass and you might as well call Matt Dinniman a fisherman because my attention? HOOKED.

I've heard so many good and bad things about this book so I was quite apprehensive about being disappointed once I started. You can imagine my surprise when it went above and beyond my initial expectations! Instead of just being within the realm of campy, the serious and often real stakes that Carl and the talking cat, Princess Donut, endured help cement the legitimacy of the story.

The story revolves around our protagonist, Carl, who was literally caught with his pants down as all semblance of society and life as we know it disappears in the blink of an eye. He enters a dungeon together with his cat, Princess Donut, to compete in a literal life-and-death fight against Elden Ring-esque monsters employing RPG game mechanisms.

If you're the type of person who enjoys playing RPG games and probably uses Twitch, then this would be right up your alley. If you haven't played any games recently, then the explanations to get the ball rolling might get a little too info-dumpy and might affect your enjoyment of the series.

I suggest giving this first book a try because there's so much to love! 

To start with, I loved the characters! Carl is a no-nonsense practical guy who's just here to survive despite the dungeon AI's foot fetish obsession and the ethical situations he constantly finds himself plagued with. I like how straight and moral he is, qualities that are hard to remember and hold on to once the rules reward murder and destruction. And there is a lot of murder and destruction that goes on in this book. Like <I>please-look-at-trigger-warnings-before-you-cast-judgement</i> a lot.

His foil is Princess Donut, a cat blessed with sentience and charisma. She is haughty and proud tempered with her love for Carl and her passion for the camera. She'd make a good streamer - one that can potentially make it big on both Youtube AND Twitch. Her antics and choices are ostentatious, which makes Carl's unintentional catchphrase of "Goddamnit, Donut" all the more humorous.

I'm a huge sucker for interconnected alien or monster species that thrive within a particular environment. If you like the anime Dungeon Meshi, I think you'd enjoy this. We are met with a variety of creatures that Carl and Donut fight for experience. They're not just mindless creatures; they are involved in politics and instinct within their race and the dungeon's rules. Although they're NPCs, you catch bits and pieces of their lore through the AI's description which hints towards a bigger story than what we see in this book.

One of the highlights of this story is the streaming concept. It reminds me of the manhwa "Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint" so if you enjoyed that, you might enjoy this as well. I like that the characters are challenged by a third aspect - to make their survival as spectacular and as captivating to the average viewer. Carl and Donut's murder spree - because killing sentient and self-aware NPCs to survive is STILL murder - is televised and weighed by billions of lives and in turn, they continue to survive and thrive due to an ambivalent viewer's interest.

There's a lot to unpack there but on the surface, I've found myself enjoying it to even let out more than a chuckle or two. It is a funny book if your sense of humor is wry and dry, which only Andy Weir has wielded masterfully so far.

I highly recommend this book! It's a good book to read if you're looking to be entertained and you want to root for characters that continue to persist against all foreseeable odds. If you don't find the
mass murder, genocide, infanticide, senicide, cannibalism, implied rape, filicide, drug abuse
palatable concepts for the sake of entertainment and to show the bleak, depressing world they live in or you're not a big fan of complex game descriptions, then this might not be the best book for you. And that's okay! 

Overall, I'm off to purchase the second book to figure out what the hell happens next. 

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erebus53's review against another edition

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adventurous dark funny tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.25

With this book you get exactly what's on the box.
We meet our main character on a child winter night wearing pink crocs, boxes to s, no shirt and a leather jacket and carrying a squirming prize winning tortoiseshell Persian cat.
His inventory is, half a packet of cigarettes.

This is not your typical dungeon crawl. Not your typical setup. The basis of the story is similar to Running Man meets Hunger Games, in a high-fantasy (plus bombs and guns) rogue-like dungeon crawl, with elements that feel similar to Douglas Adams, and somewhat similar to Diabolo.. kinda. The target audience is pretty clear, it's self-critical of the genre, it's ultra-violent, and has some ridiculous humour, off colour sexual content, and also peppered with some sober deathdealing brutality and remorse.

The audiobook is beautifully produced with one narrator doing a lot of different voices. Dialogue in tunnels has a touch of echo on it, calling over long distances is less loud, robotic AI tooltips or other-being voices have effects on them. The effect is really immersive and very well pulled off.

The story is a lot of fun, and this is only book one.

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