![]() ![]() I quite liked it, especially the worldbuilding, the interesting powers and how the characters approached the mecanisms of the world. ![]() I've also read Word in its entirety 5 years ago, and started (and forgot to continue) Ward ~1 year ago, if that helps. Problem is, I'm not sure which one I would prefer.įor context, I've read the first few chapters of both books 2-3 years ago I think, and forgot most of it (1.1 to 1.4 at most I think), so I don't really know much about the Pactverse outside of some PactDice documents and small parts of the wiki. I think I've been looking for something to read, and I've been eyeing the Pactverse for a while now. Paypal Support Wildbow via.Question is basically in the title. Sex and intimate moments may come up the go-to rule here is a ‘fade to black’ or skipping ahead before the point where any underwear comes off, but the work may touch on anything up to that point. Violence, nightmarish fates and tragedy are liable to happen. Ward is not recommended for sensitive or young readers. Occurring mostly between these ‘arcs’ are interludes, which are chapters that serve as side stories and alternate takes or formats, switching from the protagonist’s viewpoint to side characters and background characters, who may or may not have been introduced. Each arc consists of a collection of chapters and encapsulates a roughly book-sized chunk of the greater story. See the Support page for more information on goal amounts and bonus chapter schedules.Īs a serial, the story is broken down into arcs and chapters. The aim is for a 2.5 chapter a week schedule. As a serial, Ward will update with a twice-a-week (Tuesday & Saturday) schedule, with additional chapters appearing on Thursdays as donation milestones are met. McCrae in professional correspondence, to not be confused with the Canadian poet) – see the FAQ for more on the author. Ward is the fourth work and first official sequel written by ‘Wildbow’, who goes by John McCrae in real life (or J.C. The teaser features nine chapters of Parahumans Online, email, and chatroom content with hints and clues about the story to come. If you missed the ‘Glow-worm’ teaser, click here to read it. She’s put in a position to make the decision: will she compromise to help forge what they call, with dark sentiment, a second golden age? Or will she stand tall as a gilded dark age dawns? She’s perhaps the person least suited to have anything to do with this tenuous peace or to stand alongside these false heroes. The facilities hosted parahumans and their victims, but the facilities are ruined or gone one of many fragile ex-patients is left to find a place in a fractured world. None feel the injustice of this new status quo or the lack of established footing more than the past residents of the parahuman asylums. One of many compromises, uneasy truces and deceptions that are starting to splinter as humanity rebuilds. The world ended two years ago, and as humanity straddles the old world and the new, there aren’t records, witnesses, or facilities to answer the villains’ past actions in the present. It’s an uneasy thing to come to terms with when notorious supervillains and even monsters are playing at being hero. The unwritten rules that govern the fights and outright wars between ‘capes’ have been amended: everyone gets their second chance. The teaser is something of a prologue that features nine chapters of Parahumans Online, email, and chatroom content with hints and clues about the story to come. Those wanting to read this story without any spoilers or information on the overarching plot can click Here. Heavy spoilers for Worm follow from this point on. It is not meant to be read in isolation, and would-be readers should check out the prior work first. This work is a sequel, the events following that of the web serial Worm. ![]()
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