Ready Player One

374 pages

English language

Published March 26, 2011 by Broadway Paperbacks.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (23 reviews)

In the year 2044. reality is an ugly place. The only time teenage Wade Watts really feels alive is when he's jacked into the virtual utopia known as the OASIS. Wade's devoted his life to studying the puzzles hidden within this world's digital confines--puzzles that are based on their creator's obsession with the pop culture of decades past and that promise massive power and fortune to whoever can unlock them.

But when Wade stumbles upon the first clue, he finds himself beset by players willing to kill to take this ultimate prize. The race is on, and if Wade's going to survive, he'll have to win--and confront the real world he's always been so desperate to escape. (Provided by publisher).

11 editions

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

80s nostalgia with a clever concept, but weak narrative

3 stars

Overall this was a fun read. The world itself is quite dystopian, but the OASIS is incredible. It feels like a very natural evolution of today's online society, for better or worse. Some of the plot can feel a little sluggish with the exposition and the slowdown in the second arc of the book, but it has a good payoff at the end. The characters are OK, but not developed as well as the focus is almost solely on the main character Parzival and his obsession with the 80s, the hunt, and Art3mis. I think the concept behind this (and the nostalgia) was pretty good, though the narrative could have been better, both in terms of characters and plot.

For a full review, check out my blog: strakul.blogspot.com/2024/05/book-review-ready-player-one-by-ernest.html

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

A great book for videogame enthusaists and those who love 80's culture.

5 stars

A great story regarding a late teen engaging in a video game quest with real-world impact. Set in a dystopian future, the tale gives you a blend of a virtual world learing to positive and meaningful real-life changes.

The story is told with enthusiasm and gives you a great insight into a late teen learning there is more to life than a virtual world. It also teaches you persistance, may lead to mindblowing results.

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

I enjoyed it.

4 stars

To be honest it's been a while since I read the book so don't expect a full in depht review. Sorry.

I liked it, quite a lot indeed. I also enjoy playing video games and 90% of the action occours on a video game. I think that, as always, the book is quite superior compared to the movie.

In conclussion: I recomend it if you like cifi stuff.

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

Review of 'Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

What a funny book. It is hard to give it a fair rating, but the research alone (pure geek glory) is worth a 4-star rating. There is so much to love about the setting and the pace, but the characters are often annoying, their humor so sophomoric. It's basically a quest story, where poor Wade, who lives in a trailer park where the trailers are stacked on each other (The Stacks), seeks the all-powerful rule and riches of the deceased inventor of the Oasis. As such, the story follows the quest, and Wade becomes better for the challenges he faces, learning to live a fuller life.

It's a cool story, even though (I can't stress this enough) Wade is sometimes so incredibly annoying. You have been warned.

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

Review of 'Ready player one' on 'GoodReads'

4 stars

I said it once before: "meet "80s memes the dystopian scifi book"

I really wanted to like it, but not because it's an actually good book (in fact the writing could be better and the story isn't surprising at all - after the introduction of the characters, everybody will know how that book is ending), but because it's a well optimized meme collection with exactly the story elements that tend to sell well.

No, the dystopian megacorp doesn't win against the highly enthusiastic teenager.
Also that Girl he's crazy about, who doesn't want him because of the central conflict? Yeah, you know what'll hapen after the conflict is going to be resolved.

There's not even remotely relevant side-characters dying - at least nobody anyone would care about.

So... is this a bad book? No, it's a highly entertaining one. But not great literature.

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

Review of 'Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The beginning is quite slow and would dare say boring.
The author takes it sweet time seeing the mod and explaining the world.

The middle of the book improves this pase and the story becomes more interesting.

The end is not bad but isn't great.

Overall the book is pretty predictable except for one or two minor surprises. I enjoyed the book but wanted too floored by it.

Review of 'Ready Player One' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A great nostalgic romp through the past, the present and, perhaps a not too distant future. It points out what's wrong with our global culture today in a way that brings back the hope we had growing up in the 70's and 80's. It reinvigorates a faith in the goodness of humanity in spite of our current mistakes and failings. And it points out the absolute value of charity towards one another. And it shows how we know all this; we learned it all growing up but forgot it being part of the rat race or being run over by it.

It's full of Easter eggs from pop culture and the best ones are those he brings up without pointing them out, leaving the reader to notice them.

For anyone who is nostalgic about the late 70's and 80's and the tabletop role-playing game that spawned many others and computer …

Review of 'Ready Player One' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There was one point in this novel where I was grinding my teeth. It was spelled out for the characters how to find the Jade Key to go further in their treasure hunt, and somehow I got it in an instant and those ubergeeks who knew everything about the creator of the treasure hunt and his way of thinking keep on missing it for weeks. Old run-down house and collecting trophies! How hard can it be?!

Which means most likely that I am a bit too geeky in some way. At least I can't quote WarGames from memory, but at least the Monty Python challenge later would have been able for me.

Ready Player One is about a treasure hunt in a virtual reality (OASIS) which by the point when the novel takes place has taken over all other MMORPGs and works as most peoples' workplace, school, entertainment, and what-have-you. …

reviewed Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One, #1)

Review of 'Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is light, almost fluffy reading, but above all, it is incredibly fun reading. I think in order to fully appreciate this book the reader needs to meet one major condition: a) enjoy video games. If this condition is met, there are further conditions that can enhance the enjoyment: b) having grown up in the 80s and c) having played arcade video games. Also probably d) love old Japanese anime like Supaidaman and e)a sweeping love for anything related to SF and fantasy etc.

Lucky for me I grew up in the 80s and have played a couple arcade games, and I generally do enjoy me some video games. The story is set about 40 years ahead in the future, in a world with no oil left, where people are poor and flee into OASIS which is basically a virtual reality version of what we know as MMOs today. They …

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Subjects

  • Regression (Civilization)
  • Utopias
  • Virtual reality
  • Fiction
  • Puzzles

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