emma's Reviews > Ready Player Two
Ready Player Two (Ready Player One, #2)
by
by
emma's review
bookshelves: non-ya, sci-fi, dystopian, unpopular-opinion, 1-and-a-half-stars, reviewed, nope
Mar 29, 2018
bookshelves: non-ya, sci-fi, dystopian, unpopular-opinion, 1-and-a-half-stars, reviewed, nope
Hello, everyone.
Roll call time! Let’s make sure we’re all present:
- me, the cynical and disappointed reviewer, equal parts dreading the angry comments to come and wizened and numb by the angry comments that have come before (here!)
- other people who were genuinely disappointed by this book after really liking the first one
- the lifeless incels who are sure to yell at me for being a woman on the internet who dares to have an opinion on something that’s For The Boys (definitely here - see comments)
Okay! With that, I think we’re ready to get started!
(insert throat clearing, glass tapping, and so on)
...
This book is bad.
Something impressive is that it’s actually bad in a variety of ways, instead of just really bad in a couple. It’s groundbreaking in that way.
I mean, let’s start with the pacing, considering that was the inescapable nightmare that plagued me for seemingly one thousand pages, unrelentingly boring and yelling WHAT IF I RUIN EVERYTHING? WHAT IF THIS IS NEVER FUN FOR EVEN ONE MOMENT? WHAT THEN? until I break down in tears.
Just kidding. I don’t cry. I’m too powerful.
Be warned, angry men. (It’s funny to pretend they’re actually reading this when we all know they saw the rating and skipped right to the comments section.)
But anyway, back to the garbage fire.
We kick off this rollercoaster ride of fun and excitement with about a hundred pages of worldbuilding, which would make more sense if this weren’t the SECOND BOOK IN A SERIES. A SEQUEL. We spend 20% of the book pm info dumping, when the action starts we have to pause for 25 pages to go in-depth into every single technological side effect or potential problem.
Of fictional technology.
It made me want to scoop my brain out with a melon baller. (Already regretting how gross that mental image is, but I simply must speak my truth.)
Then, once we get past what I’m calling What We Talk About When We Talk About How Not To Write Sci-Fi, we get to...well, more of that.
When we skip past the worldbuilding, we FINALLY!!! get to the quest, which is, uh. Not better.
They say if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. But unfortunately we’re already 400 words in.
Once we get to the actual plot, it constantly interrupts itself to info-dump, give more nonsense explanations, and build up romantic relationships NO ONE CARES ABOUT!!! The entire reason the first book is fun is because it is almost all action.
This is...almost none action. Because the quest itself is somehow never the focal point?
Even the clues and riddles and tasks the story does focus on seem to be the most boring ones. I swear it felt like we spent 82% of this book following Aech around as she ran through Prince trivia.
Or people who actually read that section would feel that way, I imagine. I skimmed the hell out of it.
Let’s take this lovely little side path to talking about the characters.
Our main character, Wade, is super selfish and a dumbass and it sucks to read about. To put it, you know, bluntly. In the first book he can be hard to like, but I liked him, because he was dedicated and single-minded and determined and had a development arc I found compelling. Also he was doing interesting things.
In this, he has all of the stamina, backbone, and critical thinking skills of a Build-a-Bear (trademark). And not one of the ones you can put a voicebox in.
He is constantly thinking things like “What? How could this technology that enters people’s brains and controls them fully and has life-ending side effects and destroys any hope of fixing the world be bad? To me, it sounds good.”
And it’s like...didn’t we just spend an entire book doing this?
He’s also, like, a trillionaire, so instant guillotine in my book.
Wade has two friends who, unsurprisingly, seem pretty uninterested in being his friend. (Who would be?) There’s Shoto, a Japanese guy who is obsessed with all things ninja-related, and Aech, a Black girl who speaks totally differently from the other characters (“Oh! Yo! I said God damn, Shoto!”) and inexplicably breaks into hip-hop style dance moves.
Enough said, no? (See you in the comments, people who want to be angry at me for not letting straight white men write “diverse” characters by drawing on *checks notes* racial stereotypes.)
Then there’s Samantha, Wade’s love interest and a true barrel of laughs. I love a girl who is a full-on snooze. I hated this romance in the first book, and I hate it even more now that I have to read Wade thinking about losing his virginity to Samantha, featuring details on how they “couldn’t stop making love.”
So, to sum up: bad pacing, bad plot, bad worldbuilding, bad characters, bad relationships, bad morals.
Bottom line: This book should be reserved only for punishing society’s most heinous criminals.
-----------------
pre-review
let the games begin.
review to come / 1.5 stars
-----------------
currently-reading updates
people have gotten angrier at me in the comments of this review than possibly in any other i've written, and i haven't even read it yet.
let's give them something to be mad about, shall we?
-----------------
tbr review
NOTE: i wrote this review in TWO THOUSAND AND EIGHTEEN, when this book was announced. it's not a review, it's me marking it as to-read. chill the ever-living hell out.
title!!! cover!!! pub date!!!
i don't know what this book is about and i don't know why people are getting mad at me in the comments of this review but regardless things are happening!!!
-----------------
announcement review
I'M FURIOUS.
CATCH ME OUT HERE BEING: FURIOUS.
WHAT IS HAPPENING. WHY IS THIS BOOK BEING BROUGHT INTO EXISTENCE. WHO ASKED. WHO SAID, "YOU KNOW THAT PERFECT STANDALONE THAT DOESN'T NEED A SECOND BOOK? YEAH. GIVE IT A SECOND BOOK." WAS IT STEVEN SPIELBERG? JUST TELL ME. I'M NOT MAD. I JUST WANNA TALK.
i mean. i'm going to read this book. that should go without saying.
BUT I'M NOT GOING TO BE HAPPY ABOUT IT.
okay. maybe a little bit happy. okay yes i will probably be at least mostly happy BUT ALSO THERE WILL STILL BE ANGER INVOLVED.
in the immortal words of jessie j featuring B.o.B.: it's all about the money.
Roll call time! Let’s make sure we’re all present:
- me, the cynical and disappointed reviewer, equal parts dreading the angry comments to come and wizened and numb by the angry comments that have come before (here!)
- other people who were genuinely disappointed by this book after really liking the first one
- the lifeless incels who are sure to yell at me for being a woman on the internet who dares to have an opinion on something that’s For The Boys (definitely here - see comments)
Okay! With that, I think we’re ready to get started!
(insert throat clearing, glass tapping, and so on)
...
This book is bad.
Something impressive is that it’s actually bad in a variety of ways, instead of just really bad in a couple. It’s groundbreaking in that way.
I mean, let’s start with the pacing, considering that was the inescapable nightmare that plagued me for seemingly one thousand pages, unrelentingly boring and yelling WHAT IF I RUIN EVERYTHING? WHAT IF THIS IS NEVER FUN FOR EVEN ONE MOMENT? WHAT THEN? until I break down in tears.
Just kidding. I don’t cry. I’m too powerful.
Be warned, angry men. (It’s funny to pretend they’re actually reading this when we all know they saw the rating and skipped right to the comments section.)
But anyway, back to the garbage fire.
We kick off this rollercoaster ride of fun and excitement with about a hundred pages of worldbuilding, which would make more sense if this weren’t the SECOND BOOK IN A SERIES. A SEQUEL. We spend 20% of the book pm info dumping, when the action starts we have to pause for 25 pages to go in-depth into every single technological side effect or potential problem.
Of fictional technology.
It made me want to scoop my brain out with a melon baller. (Already regretting how gross that mental image is, but I simply must speak my truth.)
Then, once we get past what I’m calling What We Talk About When We Talk About How Not To Write Sci-Fi, we get to...well, more of that.
When we skip past the worldbuilding, we FINALLY!!! get to the quest, which is, uh. Not better.
They say if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. But unfortunately we’re already 400 words in.
Once we get to the actual plot, it constantly interrupts itself to info-dump, give more nonsense explanations, and build up romantic relationships NO ONE CARES ABOUT!!! The entire reason the first book is fun is because it is almost all action.
This is...almost none action. Because the quest itself is somehow never the focal point?
Even the clues and riddles and tasks the story does focus on seem to be the most boring ones. I swear it felt like we spent 82% of this book following Aech around as she ran through Prince trivia.
Or people who actually read that section would feel that way, I imagine. I skimmed the hell out of it.
Let’s take this lovely little side path to talking about the characters.
Our main character, Wade, is super selfish and a dumbass and it sucks to read about. To put it, you know, bluntly. In the first book he can be hard to like, but I liked him, because he was dedicated and single-minded and determined and had a development arc I found compelling. Also he was doing interesting things.
In this, he has all of the stamina, backbone, and critical thinking skills of a Build-a-Bear (trademark). And not one of the ones you can put a voicebox in.
He is constantly thinking things like “What? How could this technology that enters people’s brains and controls them fully and has life-ending side effects and destroys any hope of fixing the world be bad? To me, it sounds good.”
And it’s like...didn’t we just spend an entire book doing this?
He’s also, like, a trillionaire, so instant guillotine in my book.
Wade has two friends who, unsurprisingly, seem pretty uninterested in being his friend. (Who would be?) There’s Shoto, a Japanese guy who is obsessed with all things ninja-related, and Aech, a Black girl who speaks totally differently from the other characters (“Oh! Yo! I said God damn, Shoto!”) and inexplicably breaks into hip-hop style dance moves.
Enough said, no? (See you in the comments, people who want to be angry at me for not letting straight white men write “diverse” characters by drawing on *checks notes* racial stereotypes.)
Then there’s Samantha, Wade’s love interest and a true barrel of laughs. I love a girl who is a full-on snooze. I hated this romance in the first book, and I hate it even more now that I have to read Wade thinking about losing his virginity to Samantha, featuring details on how they “couldn’t stop making love.”
So, to sum up: bad pacing, bad plot, bad worldbuilding, bad characters, bad relationships, bad morals.
Bottom line: This book should be reserved only for punishing society’s most heinous criminals.
-----------------
pre-review
let the games begin.
review to come / 1.5 stars
-----------------
currently-reading updates
people have gotten angrier at me in the comments of this review than possibly in any other i've written, and i haven't even read it yet.
let's give them something to be mad about, shall we?
-----------------
tbr review
NOTE: i wrote this review in TWO THOUSAND AND EIGHTEEN, when this book was announced. it's not a review, it's me marking it as to-read. chill the ever-living hell out.
title!!! cover!!! pub date!!!
i don't know what this book is about and i don't know why people are getting mad at me in the comments of this review but regardless things are happening!!!
-----------------
announcement review
I'M FURIOUS.
CATCH ME OUT HERE BEING: FURIOUS.
WHAT IS HAPPENING. WHY IS THIS BOOK BEING BROUGHT INTO EXISTENCE. WHO ASKED. WHO SAID, "YOU KNOW THAT PERFECT STANDALONE THAT DOESN'T NEED A SECOND BOOK? YEAH. GIVE IT A SECOND BOOK." WAS IT STEVEN SPIELBERG? JUST TELL ME. I'M NOT MAD. I JUST WANNA TALK.
i mean. i'm going to read this book. that should go without saying.
BUT I'M NOT GOING TO BE HAPPY ABOUT IT.
okay. maybe a little bit happy. okay yes i will probably be at least mostly happy BUT ALSO THERE WILL STILL BE ANGER INVOLVED.
in the immortal words of jessie j featuring B.o.B.: it's all about the money.
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Reading Progress
March 29, 2018
– Shelved
December 8, 2020
–
Started Reading
December 14, 2020
–
Finished Reading
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by
Casey
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rated it 2 stars
Apr 30, 2021 12:44PM
This is a 100% valid review. Super boring book.
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I made it 58 pages in before deciding to check out reviews to see if this book got any better. This is the first review I read and is literally all I needed to know. Thanks for that, lol.
Brett wrote: "I'm a lifeless incel and completely agree with your review."
You've done it, Emma! The conversion has begun!!!
You've done it, Emma! The conversion has begun!!!
James wrote: "Brett wrote: "I'm a lifeless incel and completely agree with your review."
You've done it, Emma! The conversion has begun!!!"
Maybe we're all not so different after all.
You've done it, Emma! The conversion has begun!!!"
Maybe we're all not so different after all.
Horrid and insipid sequel. All the fun and nostalgia were changed into aimless name drops and cultural jerking off. Framed around another but this time boring quest. Here are the interesting things the book does nothing with.
Rogue Avatar
Villifying Halliday
Conceptual Immortality
John Hughes World
The Return of Sorrento
Everyone's a trillionaire so who the hell cares? I rage read this and thankfully finished it last night. Can't wait for RP3
Nerds in spaaaaace.
Halliday Help Us. Spielberg won't touch this with a 40 foot pole.
Rogue Avatar
Villifying Halliday
Conceptual Immortality
John Hughes World
The Return of Sorrento
Everyone's a trillionaire so who the hell cares? I rage read this and thankfully finished it last night. Can't wait for RP3
Nerds in spaaaaace.
Halliday Help Us. Spielberg won't touch this with a 40 foot pole.
Also when I got to The Low Five and The Dorkslayer, I literally thought "Is Ernest Cline fucking with me?"
Thank you for your review. I stopped reading partway to read reviews to see if it might get better. You saved me valuable time that I put to use cleaning my house instead of reading this terrible book.
While agree with your review, I can't help but ask why you read so much pulp crap and then act affronted by it. There are good books out there.
Your review is far better than this book. I'm currently trying to decide whether to power through to the end of just give up. Truly a dreadful read.
This is so hilarious! I also skimmed the Prince quest and after it seemed like it was never going to end I skimmed the last half of the John Hughes movies quest… then I just started skimming the rest of the quests after that 😅😅🤦🏻♀️
It’s like he Googled Prince, opened his Wikipedia page and loosely based a chapter around some of the trivia there. Awful.
I never had any real intention to read this, but my enjoyment of the first book could have led me to it, eventually.
I think, at this stage, I'm well and truly inoculated against any such potential illness.
I think, at this stage, I'm well and truly inoculated against any such potential illness.
I finally had to give up about 1/4 in because NOTHING had happened. I am astounded at how bad this book is. So, so bad.
But then again, it shares many of the same qualities as the first one, which is one of my favorite books of all time. It is gripping and well-written in some places.
God this might well be one of the worst books I've ever read. The first one was hardly a masterpiece but at least it was fun, this simply wasn't. It feels like exactly what it is; a panicked attempt to cash in on an unexpectedly popular franchise.
Amen! Struggling to get through the first quarter of it. I started another book even though I’m not finished (something I never do) just to take a break from it.
I loved the first book, so I was excited about this one, but what the actual f*ck? This book is so cringeworthy and just plain bad. I was hoping it would get better but seeing from your review it doesn’t, so I’m giving up. Life’s too short for this sh*t.
The perfect review doesn’t ex…. This sums up the book and my thoughts on it perfectly. Wish I’d read it before I started!
Gave up on it, why does he feel the need to mention every single NPC they run into and then also the actor that played that character in the movie. It felt more like reading Wikipedia than a novel. Moving on to the next.
I made myself finish this book out of a morbid curiosity. It wasn’t worth it. Your review is spot on. And let’s add the incessant pop culture references just for the sake of themselves. I was annoyed from beginning to end. The final quest was so anticlimactic! Finally Artemis has her chance to do battle and all she does is put everyone to sleep?! So disappointed.
Cynicism is a human thing, not a gender thing. Your opinion is yours, good or bad. Not all dissenting opinion dissents because of who you are. The less people lean on this, the better—there’s a lot of projection out there which need not be a thing. That being said, there’s a lot of genuine hate for who people are, as well. Hating the haters doesn’t get rid of the haters. Just filter them out and don’t give them the time of day…and don’t let them live rent-free in your head. You might become less the cynic that way.
Agree with your review. Book was very disappointing. I finished it out of some warped sense of duty, but definitely the worst book I've read this year. Maybe last couple years.
I actually like Art3mis, but it was definitely cringe reading about how they lost their virginity to each other multiple times. I really wish they made her character developed into a bigger bad ass. Instead she randomly pops in for a chapter and then leaves again. So much potential for her character, wasted on being a love interest. Women are multi dimensional. We can be both.
Absolutely agree that the first third was a complete retread of the first book and that the action wasn't very actiony.
Thank you for this review, so I didn’t have to write it. It was all just so…much. So many words. So much telling and not showing. The Prince quest, which was clever, should have been delightful and not the overwritten slog it turned out to be. A shame.
Spot on so many inconsistencies and stupid plot devices….I spent a lot of the book thinking please let this be some sort of holodeck/virtual test Halliday set up and none of it’s real, it would have at least excused some of the issues
Yeah, it was bad. Funny part is that for me the Prince section was the only thing that may have been a highlight. I will note that I do have a Price baseball cap.
"Instant guillotine" made me laugh out loud -- and it's true! This book especially does not pass the vibe check in 2021, especially the subplot about going off to space. Makes me want to eat the rich even more!
Oh god I’m about to start the Prince portion and I’m scared. This is exactly how I feel about this book, it’s so heavy handed and it feels SO much like a slightly sterilized male fantasy with some “I’m woke” sprinkles hammered in
OldLangSineWave wrote: "Wow. Someone has a real chip on their shoulder about men."
Wow, someone is not aware how much they reveal themselves, with such prejudicial words.
Wow, someone is not aware how much they reveal themselves, with such prejudicial words.
I’m making my second attempt at this book. I loved the first book and was so excited to read this one. But ugh!! I absolutely hate what they’ve done to Wade’s character. I’m at the part where they find the 2nd shard and glad they plot has picked up. But your review doesn’t give me hope lol.
Wow! Awesome review! I waited 8 months for this book to come available from my local library. I’m on page 45 and want to know what the hell it is that I’m reading. So far I feel like the story has started and stopped several times. The 80s references in this book are all falling flat for me. I really loved how Ready Player One kept the plot moving, and placed this world (which I felt built itself as the story progressed) within someone’s memories of 80s… something that I could relate to… being a child of the 80s.
Ready Player Two is thus far really really bad. Not even nostalgic… just bad.
Wade has turned into a self-loathing and self-unaware prick. Weird… when I read Ready Player One, I pictured Wade as a Jonah Hill (from Superbad)… now I picture Mark Zuckerberg… sitting in a mansion… eating popcorn… while the truth of his complicity in not addressing Facebook / Instagram influence on young girls’ psyches unfolds in front of congress…
Ok. I’m on pg 45… I must keep reading.
I waited 8 months for this book to come available, I must finish it. Let’s see if my thoughts change…
Based on your review, I won’t hold my breath.
Ready Player Two is thus far really really bad. Not even nostalgic… just bad.
Wade has turned into a self-loathing and self-unaware prick. Weird… when I read Ready Player One, I pictured Wade as a Jonah Hill (from Superbad)… now I picture Mark Zuckerberg… sitting in a mansion… eating popcorn… while the truth of his complicity in not addressing Facebook / Instagram influence on young girls’ psyches unfolds in front of congress…
Ok. I’m on pg 45… I must keep reading.
I waited 8 months for this book to come available, I must finish it. Let’s see if my thoughts change…
Based on your review, I won’t hold my breath.
I concur. This book is a heaping pile of the stuff Dr. Malcom found in the original movie Jurassic Park and probably smells even worse.
Totally agree. I gave it 3 stars though.
I'll be honest, the first 80-90 pages were uninspiring as it was just endless exposition of what had happened since Ready Player One, in a monologue format with no interaction recreated with other characters in the catch up of "the story so far". Then something finally happened and the going got good, sort of. It was kind of like reading the first book, only this time I had a critical eyeroll going on (few human brains remember this much fact or can process this much information etc.) and this time it wasn't as exciting, perhaps far too much info dumping unnecessarily for every quest (we don't need to know that this scene is a virtual character from a film made in this year and played by this actor, who attended the premier here on this date, because no one cares and NO ONE WOULD HAVE THAT USELESS INFO IN THEIR HEAD OR WOULD LOOK IT UP IN THE MIDDLE OF A LIFE THREATENING QUEST). I didn't care about any of the characters this time around because there was hardly any effective character development, too much info dumping filling the 368 pages. The story was fun though once it got going, if not as good as the first time around, so you'll get 3 stars.
I'll be honest, the first 80-90 pages were uninspiring as it was just endless exposition of what had happened since Ready Player One, in a monologue format with no interaction recreated with other characters in the catch up of "the story so far". Then something finally happened and the going got good, sort of. It was kind of like reading the first book, only this time I had a critical eyeroll going on (few human brains remember this much fact or can process this much information etc.) and this time it wasn't as exciting, perhaps far too much info dumping unnecessarily for every quest (we don't need to know that this scene is a virtual character from a film made in this year and played by this actor, who attended the premier here on this date, because no one cares and NO ONE WOULD HAVE THAT USELESS INFO IN THEIR HEAD OR WOULD LOOK IT UP IN THE MIDDLE OF A LIFE THREATENING QUEST). I didn't care about any of the characters this time around because there was hardly any effective character development, too much info dumping filling the 368 pages. The story was fun though once it got going, if not as good as the first time around, so you'll get 3 stars.
He managed to take everything I liked about the main peeps and dump it, especially Wade. There are aspects of the story that were interesting and could have worked since he decided to move forward with a sequel, but clearly he couldn't pull it off, and didn't have anyone near him to help him pull it off, cause this was a hot mess.
I didn't skim the Prince section because I'm a completionist. I did laugh my ass off through the fight scene, though.
Don't wanna post spoilers here in case someone actually cares, but I have my own idea of a "How it should have been," that I'll post on my page - aside, of course from Cline leaving the first book as a standalone as it should have been...greedy bast- nvm.
I didn't skim the Prince section because I'm a completionist. I did laugh my ass off through the fight scene, though.
Don't wanna post spoilers here in case someone actually cares, but I have my own idea of a "How it should have been," that I'll post on my page - aside, of course from Cline leaving the first book as a standalone as it should have been...greedy bast- nvm.