Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
It is quite vague about what to evaluate, but it was the book that had the power to read to the end.
James Halliday, the billionaire of game producers, has developed a massive online game called Oasis before he died, which is about who searches for a hidden Easter egg leaves a will to inherit all his property and copyright. Halliday, who had a special affection for the culture of the 70s and 80s, who spent his teenage years, has become a global research and boom of music, movies and video games around the world. Wade, the protagonist, has been reading all the content that Halliday liked to be alive since he was a child, and most of his education and relationships have been made only through the Oasis genre.
The setting itself was quite interesting and I was excited at the beginning, but the writer 's willingness to explain one more content in the 80' s was so strong that the story progressed slowly. I was exhausted from the explanation of the whole book as a whole. Nevertheless, I continued to read, because the things I felt when I played the game were vividly expressed, and there are many parts that I sympathize with, and the more I read, the more I feel emotion to the main character.
Although Wade lived a lonely and tough life under aunt who does not love herself, it was disgusting and sad that she was able to make good use of her talent for dealing with machines. And the psychological description of the boy who was unfamiliar with the person surprisingly was well. I was feeling delighted and also feeling sorry for the protagonist in real in the conflict with his friends and in forming relationships with my favorite girls.
Although there are some reversals and dramas, there are moments that have become intermediate, but it is hard to appreciate the writer's feelings and the story itself. While the materials and settings were attractive enough, the latter seemed like a way of solving the problems or seeing the children's animation.
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