Hi, anyone can recommend me a good army building novel, what ever the genre... My perfect Novel is Mediterranean Hegemon of Ancient Greece I read some which turn me off, moment that make me hold the novel for now: 1. I am the Monarch = Too many solo fight 2. World of Cultivation = Stop at when he got a "sprit granpa" 3. Amber Sword = Turn off when the female got an Armor super good at early novel 4. Tales of Reincarnated Lord = Too Short 5. Trash of Count Family = Stop at when he bought a tower 6. Release that Witch = Too many woman harem, made me wanna puke somehow 7. Human Emperor : Too long for a war, some times a war progress take 200+ chapters. But still OK 8. Stop Friendly fire,Hail the King = UGLY MC Cover dont wanna read it 9. The World Online = confusing world set up, not a strong world build any suggestion anyone ? tq
World's Greatest Militia. Guy is a retired mercenary leader. Their mercenary group had a get together at the same day the apocalypse happened. Monsters appeared and all modern weponry, and modern weaponry only, was destroyed by a mysterious fog. MC got an ability to buy modern weaponry and military equipment that is not affected by the fog using the points he got from killing monsters. That's basically it. Translation got discontinued though.
Hmm. Ever try City of Sin? Monarch of Evernight by the same author is good, too, but focuses more on solo fights or on solo characters fighting on battlefields, and less on the MC leading his organization/army. City of Sin has plenty of solo focus, but it spends a lot more time on the MC's army, companions and whatnot. Conquering... foreign territory... is a sizable part of the novel.
I don't know if it's flat, actually. Might be spherical. Planes are worlds, not floating discs in space. Usually, anyway - the thing about planes is that the fundamental rules of reality can differ a bit from plane to plane. Or a lot. A single plane could also include multiple planets - perhaps a whole universe -, I think? But that kind of thing differs from author to author. Think of them more as worlds or dimensions rather than flat floating discs in space, though, and you'll usually be right. Most of the time, the author probably didn't put a lot of thought into it, though, and just lifted the idea of "planes" from D&D or other places.
Heimarian looks promising for it description, I finish solo, like it, but its not really an army management.
well maybe, but when a novel say Plane already, it turn me off instantly/ I prefer I eat tomatoes when it comes to cultivation where all is real planets