After the death of his father, Nick is sent to live with his brother, Simon, at the Research Station he is the director of. While Nick's official title is "Research Assistant," Nick knows that most people on Station 79 view Nick as nothing more than a product of nepotism. That is, until they discover a strange alien artifact on Majus, the planet the Station is there to study. As soon as the artifact is activated, Nick loses consciousness and finds himself in a strange world. Even worse, when Nick attempts to approach a villager to find out where he is, they call him a Demon and attack him, ultimately killing him. Waking back on Station 79, he relays to Simon what happened to him, exhausted he falls back asleep almost immediately to find himself right back in the strange world he was in before. This is the beginning of what will be a hellish adventure for Nick. Every time he closes is eyes in the real world he finds himself back on the planet that he now knows is called Yensere, guided by an AI system called Cateloger he discovers he seems to be stuck in some sort of digital world, knowing this Research will be important Nick dives back into Yesenre over and over after dying, knowing that in the real world his body is wasting away. And when a Planetary Director arrives on Station 79 to destroy The Artifact and end the lives of all who live there both Simon and Nick realize that what is happening to Nick as far bigger and far more important than they ever imagined and while Nick maybe immortal in Yensere he certainly is not in real life. He is in a race across time to not just discover The Artifact's secrets but to save the people of both Yesenre and Station 79 before a great Calamity destroys them all.
This is the first LitRPG I've read, and now I'm kicking myself for never reading one before. Level Unknown is a kinda science fantasy that meets Isekai meets RPG, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. It, of course, has the badass fights scenes and amazing world building I've come to look forward to in any book Dalglish writes with JRPG/ anime influence that made it unputtdownable for me.
Not only that, it's got some really amazing characters. Nick is great. Of course, his growth throughout the books is wonderfully handled. At the beginning, I kinda wanted to kill him myself. He just kept doing the same stupid thing over and over and somehow expects different results, but as the story goes on, he grows up a ton. By the end of the book, he's almost a completely different person. He's more confident in himself and he's accepted that regardless of whether Yensere is real it's a place he wants to protect as much as he wants to figure out what the Artifact is to save his own people IRL.
Gareth is also a great character as well because he's just so far in denial about literally everything that he can't see what's going on at all. He believes his faith in Vaan is strong, but it's clearly not making him the perfect example of "If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for everything." And oh boy, does he. He most definitely needs to grow up almost as much as Nick needed, too.
My favorite characters, though, aren't even really human. Cateloger, which is the AI system in Yensere, is absolutely fantastic. It's funny. It's as supportive as it can be for an AI, and it's a giant smart ass. All traits I love. Sorrow, Nick's sentient sword is equally amazing but in different ways. While there's definitely some comic relief there, Sorrow's back story is a huge part of Nick maturing in the book. Not to mention, it's got some pretty badass special abilities.
The magic system, while very generic to anyone who has ever played an RPG, is so much more intuitive and user-friendly than anything I've ever come across in a real game. Because at the moment, as far as we known Yensere isn't real but a digital reproduction. The user has a ton of freedom when casting spells. It is very much a "If you can imagine it you can do it" system, and I really loved that. It allows for standard elemental spells to be manipulated in ways that make the spells so much more useful.
Overall, I definitely recommend this. It was just a ton of fun to read and hit all of my points for a literary RPG. To be honest, I didn't even know I had requirements for this sort of the thing until I started reading this 😅
As always, thanks to Orbit Books and NetGalley for the eArc!