The Dreamside Road

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

Five years after the world fell into chaos, a treasure of artifacts is up for grabs. The relics of the Dreamside Road offer a power that could help rebuild or annihilate what remains. Orson Gregory is an adventurer for hire, but hunts this treasure for answers, not glory. Enoa Cloud’s late aunt helped hide the Dreamside Road, but following in her aunt’s supernatural tradition offers her as much peril as power. Together, Orson and Enoa battle a magic-obsessed militia, clash with a host of rivals, and face constant adventure on their journey to find the Dreamside Road.

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NOTE: The Progression tag applies specifically to Enoa. Also, fair warning, that element doesn't enter the story until she begins her studies.

Content: Main characters range in age from teenagers to people in their thirties and older, but it will not contain gratuitous violence or explicit sexual content. It also won’t shy away from implication, anything to make this story and its world feel more real. Characters will freely allude to potentially triggering topics, including living with a disability, facing terminal illness, coping with trauma, surviving societal destabilization, and the consequences of bigotry. At its most intense, the Dreamside Road is a hard PG-13.

Worldbuilding: This is not a story with a lot of early exposition scenes, conveniently explaining ‘magic systems’ and political dynamics. Readers will learn, progressively, as the characters do. This story/world has a ‘magic system’, or rather, a set of systems, but the effort to quantify and understand the truth of the setting plays a role in the backstory, as well as in some character motivations. In that same vein, not every character has a firm grasp on the nature of their world, and not every piece of dialog from every character should be taken as entirely truthful Worldbuilding.

Also, this isn't the softest Sci-fi. There are at least some basic explanations given for various elements, but Royal Road does not give me a spectrum to choose from. Given the choice between hard and soft, let's just sayThe Dreamside Roadwon't be cited in any college Physics papers.

Setting and Theme:The Dreamside Roadwalks the line between fantasy and science fiction and deals with finding one’s place in a changing world. Many of the characters in this story are United States natives and the story begins in the United States, my homeland. However, knowledge or interest in this country is not necessary to understand the story, especially as it progresses. Also, as this is a novel that deals with societal collapse and while that damage may be widespread, in story, I don’t want to overstep and critique the culture of others’ unless I have particular knowledge in a given area. Ultimately,the Dreamside Roadis American in the same wayHarry Potteris English, fantasies that do not have a full secondary world, but with enough original elements to fully diverge the setting from our the real world.

Chapters(165 total)

Reviews

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Community Reviews(1)

  • ViewitRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    I like this story because it’s unique. The characters have got their own vibe to them, and I like the world and the magic system that we’re still learning about.
    The thing is, it sits in a really unusual place genre-wise and that makes it hard to compare to other writing. It’s contemporary fantasy but with a lot of sf stuff mixed in. It works well for me, but readers who really like the recurring plots you see in a lot of web novels likely won’t climb on board.
    In the story, there was this government organization that studied everything weird and they were destroyed in the apocalypse. A magic treasure was stolen from them and is hidden somewhere. All kinds of characters are looking for this. We follow three: a veteran hero guy, a girl learning magic, and the militia soldier who’s trying to track them. It switches between their perspectives and imo it’s done well, but I know some people hate any change in POV. Also, it doesn’t give out all the world-building details. A lot of web serials have the LitRPG tutorial thing going on, and this one does not do that AT ALL. I like how it introduces its world as you read. If you hate info dumps, this is probably for you.
    Overall, the characters are fleshed out, the world feels developed and the story covers just enough that I think it could last a while. Read this if you’re looking for something adventurous and thought-out that’s doing its own thing. I hope it continues.