The Sword and Laser discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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READY PLAYER ONE


Don't get me wrong, the book's enjoyable, but I wouldn't say you NEED to read this book. Your life will not be enriched by doing so, but it is a fun diversion.
Also, Jenny's tip to listen to it at 2x speed is well worth it. At normal pace, Wheaton's narration feels slow/clunky.

He does have a slow gate doesn't he. Reminds me of someone presenting a speech and pausing for emphasis, or having done a toast masters course and been told to use it as a mechanism to ensure he doesn't speak too fast. Anyway I'm actually not minding him at normal speed, find it a relaxing pace.
Anyway I'm not far in, (view spoiler) but I would echo that it is a 'fun' read if you have a fondness with the 80's. I don't know what it says about me that so far there has been very little named from that period that I didn't know (though I did somehow miss Ladyhawke).

As someone who might still waste a lot of time in a clunky virtual world, you might say I'm totally coveting this Oasis experience. But having to pay for each teleport? Poor Wade3. ;)

As someone who might still waste a lot of time in a clunky virtual world, you might say I'm totally coveting this Oasis experience. But h..."
You play RuneScape? ;)
Generally side stepped the whole MMO(RPG)thing myself. Never trusted myself with the timesink I knew it to be.

Generally side stepped the whole MMO(RPG)thing myself. Never trusted myself with the timesink I knew it to be. "
Worse. Not a game.

*curious* We talking oldskool.. PnP & dice RPG?.. or you a Secondlifer :)

I personally know some people who use virtual worlds in education (for university and school level), but I don't think it quite took off as people thought it might - ala Ready Player One virtual world style.


I don't want to sound hypercritical. I really enjoyed the book quite a bit (4/5 stars), and I even filled in some gaps in my 80s pop culture knowledge. I especially liked how the author did his best to explain some of the pop culture references within the context of the protagonist's pursuit of the Easter egg. I felt that this worked much better than more disruptive asides/interludes I've seen in other books. I also enjoyed how the author slipped in a few hidden references (view spoiler) .
I think I need to say that I was born in 1981, and I remember quite a bit of the references from my childhood. I was a geeky male kid, into D&D, sci-fi, and video games at the time. I still enjoy 80s music. I'm not sure how much people with different backgrounds will enjoy this book, but I think the author did a pretty good job trying to keep it accessible. I'll find out when my wife reads it.

Actually if it hadn't been for this book being laden with 80's references I wouldn't have blinked if this had been slapped with the hard to pin down Young Adults tag much like The Hunger Games.

Oh come now, (view spoiler) is pretty scary :)["br"]>["br"]>


Nice. Though I thought he was ment to be larger (more overweight).. pimply etc. Didn't quite match my mental image.

Well, you know, this guy wouldn't exactly be a draw for that lucrative female audience. ;)

Well, you know, this guy wouldn't exactly be a draw for that luc..."
http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips...
(Sorry if you can't view this world family)

Well, you know, this guy wouldn't exactly be a draw for that luc..."
ha! yes, true. Still he needs some scope for transformation later in story.
I wonder how they will be able to make this movie with so many licensed properties.


it has been classified YA. and with good cause.



I did find it to be very much a reflection of the author's specific tastes...I would have preferred more Star Wars and less Japanese giant robots, but that's because of my own childhood. And the lack of any references to home consoles post-Atari seemed odd as well, considering how Nintendo dominated the second half of the 80s.
But still...good book. Really liked it.

That said, yes there are big plot holes, lots of exposition at the beginning and one other thing that is a personal pet peeves in story's like this.
He is not the only author to do it but it annoys me each time I read it. It has to do with stories set in the near future, with references to the current time (or just a few decades back). That's that it seems many authors limit there references to things that have happened instead of mixing it up with things they created for the years between now and when the story takes place. In this particular story, that would have made sense if he had kept the references solely to the era he said (the 80's +/- a few years), but once he started using WoW and Firefly (greatest TV show ever) that took place in the 21st century I felt he should have thrown some creative properties from the 2010's and 2020's in there as well. It always feels so abrupt, like creativity just stopped or something.
Sorry for the rant, just something I had to get off my chest.
John

If you grow wistful at the mention of Infocom and Atari games, can quote lines from WarGames and Monty Python, or spent your high school years listening to Rush and playing D&D, then you'll find a lot to like here. It has heaping piles of 80s "nerdstalgia."
If you're an 8bit nerd this book won't change your world, but it just might rock it.


(view spoiler)
Overall, the book worked for me. I burned through it in one (very) late night reading session, but with pauses to find gaming emulators, music videos, and film clips on YouTube. I'm a little young for most of my 80s recollections to have been from that period, and my upbringing was more about reading, music and study than about gaming & popular culture. However, as a bona-fide, card-carrying geek, the story tugged at me. The progression of the challenges, virtual treasure hunting and the details of Wade's life kept me dialed right in.
Besides: (view spoiler)

Didn't know that. Seems my gut was right then.
@Bean: I definitely sensed a homage to some of the gaming alum going on also.



totally loved this book. it gets me xD

the linked review reminds me more of the classic "true geeks" vs. "fake geeks" argument. or "real gamer" vs. "wanna be gamer" etc. one side always has to raise themselves above the other and state they are the TRUE [insert whatever]. it's tiring, annoying, and simply immature. kinda like with sex. those who have it, don't talk it about and vice versa. you can talk about gaming and being a geek or you can simply play video games and be a geek. one who truly loves what they're doing doesn't feel the need to constantly convince the rest of the world of how much they love it and how this makes them a much better person. simple as that for me.
quoting Yoda: do or do not. there is no try.

I know someone of your age and he loved that book, so I honestly doubt it's a generation thing. Some people love a book, others don't.


This book and Dirty Streets were both gushed over by the same general set of people and I've learned that I need to dial down their enthusiasm to match what I'll likely think. Nothing bad about that - we always have to figure out how others' recommendations play in our world. For me, this was a pretty stock story with a pretty stock plot and a climax that was completely predictable. It feels influenced by movies a lot - while there's some drama, there's (view spoiler) Note, btw, that the protagonist is the guy, not the girl who is every bit his equal.


For those who haven't read the Otherland series its set about 50 years in the future and about 80% of the series takes place in computer generated alternate realities and fantastical worlds. There is even a character in Otherland who is not the gender everyone thinks he / she is, just like RP1. If you liked RP1 you might try this series. It doesn't have any of the 80's fascination but it does have a very wide plot that comes together fantastically at the end.
Books mentioned in this topic
THE BIG U (other topics)Snow Crash (other topics)
Anathem (other topics)
If you lived in the 80s, you HAVE TO read this book.
If you were ever an MMO addict, You REALLY OUGHT to read this book.
If you are a geeky MMO addict obsessed with the 80s, you ARE this book.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but if T&V don't review this book for the show, then they kinda fail at their "job". Just sayin...
If it makes it any easier, Wil Wheaton narrates the Audible version.