Ready Player One
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Books similar to Ready Player One


This isn't just an anime. It's available in written form as both a Manga and a Novel.
And since I'm responding, I'll go ahead and reitterate:






Off To Be The Wizard by Scott Meyer (and its sequel), Spell or High Water.
The first book was compared on Audible.com to Ready Player One. It has geek cultural references (pretty basic, Star Wars, Star Trek, Lord of the Rings), and basics of computing (minor hacking sequences) and so forth. Again, involves (sorta) game worlds. The second book gets a little deeper with its pop references, and a little more complex and satirical of the nature of its universe.
So my current list of Ready Player One like books stands:
REAMDE by Neil Stephenson
Deamon & Freedom (TM) by Daniel Saurez
Snowcrash by Neil Stephenson
The Atopia Chronicles by Matthew Mather
Off To Be The Wizard & Spell Or High Water by Scott Meyer
And (while I didn't particularly enjoy it but enhanced my appreciation of the others): Neuromancer by William Gibson since all the above books have been greatly influenced by it.

It is brutal though."
+1 for me for "heroes die"

So my trifecta would be.
1. Ready Player One
2. Level Zero
3. Snowcrash
http://www.amazon.com/Level-Zero-Next...



EDIT: Look, I'm coming back and updating this status as right after I finished Alterworld, I picked up the second in the series The Clan. I absolutely loved both of them!! If you enjoyed RPO, pick these books up and give them a shot. I really think you'll enjoy them.




Thanks Tim! Just grabbed it. I'm not sure if anyone checked this out, but I'll rec it once again. Really good series.
http://www.amazon.com/AlterWorld-Play...

Awesome, glad you enjoyed it! I really liked it as well. I don't recall how I found/learned of it, but am glad I came across it. There are several others in the series, but I think the author is still working on having them translated.

Non-Fiction
• Masters of Doom: How Two Guys Created an Empire and Transformed Pop Culture by David Kushner
• Ghost in the Wires by Kevin Mitnick
• Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution by Steven Levy
Fiction
• Tad Williams' Otherland or William Gibson's Neuromancer.
• Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age.
• Neal Stephenson's REAMDE
• Hannu Rajaniemi's The Quantum Thief. T
• Daemon by Daniel Suarez.
• Cory Doctorow - For the Win
• Cory Doctorow - Little Brother
• Dennis McKiernan's book - Caverns of Socrates
• Dream Park Series by Niven & Pournelle
• The Barsoom Project
• California Voodoo Game.
• Terry Pratchett book Only You Can Save Mankind
• 'The Holy Machine',
• The Scott Pilgrim series,
• Lauren Beukes' Moxyland.
• Snow Crash.
• One Con Glory by Sarah Kuhn
• The Blue Adept (Anthony),
• Conqueror (S. Baxter),
• Robopocalypse,
• Idlewild
• The Barsoom Project
• California Voodoo Game.
• Massively Multiplayer.
• Charles Stross' Halting State and Rule 34
• Halting State
• Altered Carbon
• Lucifer's Dragon
• Deamon & Freedom (TM) by Daniel Saurez
• The Atopia Chronicles by Matthew Mather
• Assassin's Apprentice (Farseer Trilogy) by Robin Hobb.
• Dharma Bums by Kerouac
• Breakfast of Champions
• Insignia
• Ender's Game.
• The Equations Of Life' - The Metrozone Trilogy
• "Heroes Die" by Matthew Stover
• The Amber Series by Roger Zelazny.
• Dennis L McKiernan Caverns of Socrates
• Demons Don't Dream
• Mither Mages trilogy
• "Multiplayer" by John C. Brewer
• Metagame by Sam Landstrom
• Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore
• Upload
• "Unincorporated Man" by Dani Kollin
• Alif the Unseen by G. Willow Wilson
• KIlobyte
• David Louis Edelman's Infoquake trilogy
• Lev Grossman's Magicians series
• Mogworld - Yahtzee Croshaw.
• Scalzi's Redshirts
• Supercenter
• Armchair Safari.
• Constellation Games, by Leonard Richardson.
• Lucky Wander Boy by D.B. Weiss
• The Postmortal by Drew Magary
• Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart
• A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
• Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami
• The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly
• The Rook by Daniel O'Malley
• READ EREBOS by Ursula Polanski,
• EYE OF MINDS by James Dashner
• Brain Jack by Brian Falkner
• Epic for Connor Korstick (and Saga
• Lauren Beukes' Moxyland.
• Half the Day is Night by McHugh.
• New Model Army by Adam Roberts
• Lucky Wander Boy
• Douglas Coupland,- JPod or Microserfs.
• Michael R Underwood's Geekomancy
• Soda Pop Soldier by Nick Cole
• Off To Be The Wizard by Scott Meyer and Spell or High Water.
• Level Zero
• Hobgoblin by John Coyne.
• "You" by Austin Grossman.
• Soda Pop Soldier: A Novel
• AlterWorld.
• The Clan.
• Robert Pérez Books
• James Dashner: The Eye of Minds.
• Erebos.
• Space Demons The Trilogy by Gillian Rubinstein
• Nexus
• Epic, by Connor Kostick. It has that real life/game life crossover that was such fun in RP1.
• Play to Live series
• The Game (the game is life book 1) by Teary Schott

Thanks so much for taking the time to do this!

http://royalroadweed.blogspot.co.il/2...
Do some research on it. It hasn't been professionally translated but the link I posted does a fantastic job and with the authors consent since he hasn't been able to have it translated to English as of yet.
Also, Ender's Game? Really? I can't compare that to RPO in the least.
David by the way, thanks for summarizing everyone's suggestions! You're awesome!!


Off To Be The Wizard by Scott Meyer (and its sequel), Spell or High Water.
The first book was compared on Audible.com to Ready Player One. It has geek cult..."
Read the entire thread hoping someone would recommend the Magic 2.0 series. The 3rd book comes out next month, and all 3 are available on Kindle Lending or Unlimited. The 1st 2 were great reads and I can't wait for #3.


I felt the theme of very powerful and evil corporation against a bunch of teenagers closely paralleling the Inner Movement trilogy by Brandt Legg. Enjoy!


I didn't hate Snow Crash, but I didn't love it either. I nearly quit on it too but stubbornly stuck it out and eventually rated it 3 stars. I can empathize. Give the Magic 2.0 series by Scott Meyer a try. It doesn't have the depth of RPO but they're easy, fun reads.


The thing about Snowcrash its a parody of cyberpunk, its meant to be the genre's silliest characteristics turned to 11 as its set the backdrop 80s view of what a dystopia looks like in the early 90s: a corporatocracy of wanton unabated free market worship where lives are cheap but guns are expensive, and the people who resist are punk rock outcasts waring within the system using illegal technology as their weapon. The problem with cyber punk was clear by the early 90s as cyberpunk assumed elite technology would be out of reach for the few but somehow failed to visualize the democratization technology. This advent allowed everyone to be equal players (as seen in the online Metaverse universe Stephenson cleverly constructed), which sorta invalidated a lot of the genre's key tenants. However, in light of recent developments we may still see a technocratic elite.
It helped I had some exposure to the genre so soon as I read it, I realized after several chapters that it was meant to be tongue-in-cheek, and thus greatly enhanced my appreciation. If you read it straight, I can easily see that. Its not a book for everyone. The big takeaways is it invented the concept of having a digital avatar, believe or not, this was an idea that conceptualized by Stephenson, same with the online world being a mix of information, game and social outlet. The book is pretty prophetic in that sense, and the freely accessible internet from anywhere wasn't in the public lexicon yet in 1992. Plus, it always more or less predicted the idea of Google earth. Lastly the core ideal (without getting into plot give aways) was rather creative.
That said, the frantic pacing is rough and meant to follow the even harsher pacing of William Gibson. Anyhow, these are just my compiled thoughts on the subject, I could be totally wrong :)

but i can appreciate a writer that can write books in so many completely different styles!

Funny, I loved Snow Crash, but I gave up on REAMDE when it turned into a international spy/mercenary potboiler. It kinda threw away the fun VR elements.

Funny, I loved Snow Crash, but I gave up on REAMDE when it turned into a international spy/mercenary potboiler. It kinda threw away the fun VR elements. "
Yeah man that was weird, that is my main complain : it is a mash up and it doesn't fit so good, the VR was to short and forgotten :) Still I liked the action bit.




What book was it then?;o





At this stage, Stephenson is a better writer than Cline, but I'll say READY PLAYER ONE is superior to REAMDE, the main thrust of which is diluted by the inferior RV/terrorist subplot.
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RPO takes place in a virtual world with treasure hunts and battles and fun sci-fi excitement...Lucky wander boy is about a guy writing a video game book and obsessed with an impossible to find game.
Michael R Underwood's Geekomancy is much closer to RPO's feel. Lucky wander boy felt like some weird independent film.