W.A.R.F.R.A.M.E.

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

Through the advancement of technology, people are now able to experience firsthand what it is like to delve into cyberspace. The game of assembling cards and building a machine through them has taken the world by storm. Read on as pilots, pilot their assembled Warframes, and battle for glory and fame.

Information

Status
Hiatus
Year
2022

Royal Road Stats

Rating
3.3/ 5.0
Followers
11
Views
15,762

Chapters(48 total)

Reviews

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Community Reviews(1)

  • IllthylianRoyal Road
    ★★★ 3.0
    As much as seeing straight 3-stars might put you off, shockingly, I need to immediately say that I absolutely encourage you to read at least a bit of this for the sheer fascinating nature of this work.  I don't mean that in a negative way either, as in claiming this work is 'so bad it's good'; the story is pretty basic, there's a world-wide phenomenom game a la any number of famous card games or MMOs that everyone is playing, even settling arguments or issues through WARFRAME BATTLES in the game, and its a concept that has been done and been done well before.  What is both a negative and also why I absolutely recommend this story for a brief read is how unapologetically cliched it is.
    From a character and story perspective, I mean cliched in the absolute purest sense of the word.  I mean cliched as, in the introductory chapter, we are introduced to the world/game of Warframe by following apparently the one person on Earth who has never heard of it as a girl walks him through setup, quite literally saying "No way. To think that there is actually a guy who’s never heard of WARFRAME.  Did this guy live under a rock or something for the last few years?"  I mean cliched as, within a chapter of him setting up his Warframe, our hero is being challenged by a pretty cool dude to have a WARFRAME BATTLE, complete with the hyped up lights and explosions.  If this comes off as mocking, it is not meant as such; I was a mixture of smiles and genuine laughter the entire time I was reading for how absolutely faithful to standard it was being that I felt I was a kid again watching anime for the first time.
    The characters are, naturally, not very good.  They don't speak like humans, they don't act like humans, everything they do is in service to advancing the plot, but they are so unflinchingly genuine in that that, were it not for the serious issues with punctuation (like not hitting 'enter' when a new person is speaking') and really bad gramatical structure, I'd have assumed it was