AI: Artificial Isekai

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

What happens when an Artificial Intelligence gets transported into a world of magic. A world where mythical races exist, and dangerous dungeons plague the land.Is this a chance at redemption or a cruel punishment?

Information

Status
Completed
Year
2025
Author
NKR

Royal Road Stats

Rating
4.4/ 5.0
Followers
507
Views
201,635

Chapters(192 total)

Reviews

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Community Reviews(4)

  • shisooRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    At the start of the story it might be giving some OP / evil vibes but as it progresses it gets much more character development and becomes more slice of life kind of story.
    Really loving the fresh take on isekai and AI. I haven't seen simillar takes on RR yet so defnitely worth reading.
  • Percival_VincentRoyal Road
    ★★★★ 4.0
    I don't know if there was an edit, but the angst indicated by the only other review that exists to date doesn't seem to be there for me.
    MC has some issues, but killing everyone will do that to a person.
    While only 6 chapters in, I'm a little concerned about the power of the MC.  It's definitely not weak to strong progression around here.
  • Revilo StraightRoyal Road
    ★★★★ 4.0
    A really good start to the novel. Your classic isekai, except instead of your typical nerdy shutin, it's skynet. The writing and pacing is quite nice, very few if any mistakes. All of the characters are charming and seem to have their own things going on, instead of being paper shells for the Mcs character development.
    My only issue is how about once a chapter the Mc will have an angsty paragraph about how he's fooling every one around him and what will they do when they find out.  I'm sure as the story progresses and Mc gets further from the inciting incident.
    Over all, very nice worth your time
  • snminhducRoyal Road
    ★★★ 3.0
    That’s the problem — the character interactions feel robotic. Think about how you talk with friends, family, or coworkers every day: sometimes you get annoyed, angry, or just bored. That’s normal. But in this story, everything feels artificial.
    It’s not a good action-adventure, and it’s an even worse slice-of-life. Everyone behaves perfectly — always polite, understanding, and supportive. The hall master, the dwarf blacksmith, the receptionist — everyone.
    It ends up feeling like a show made for toddlers: no conflict, no flaws, no one to relate to. Just pure, predictable blandness.