Review Swap + Roast about my dumb little urban fantasy.

AimeEmile

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Heyo. Everything is in the title. I need feedback for a specific story I wrote which is more or less Solo Leveling but the ensemble cast is stuck at a shitty rank. You can get me to read your stuff in return, or just the roast the shit out of the fic. I'm down for whatever. Here's a brief summary:

A Warning For Those That Transcended Humanity

Wanna see low-ranking Texan criminals taking on contracts that requires them to kill or maim high-ranking super-powered folks?

Cool, me too!

I promise you: Cool fights, urban fantasy, a ranking system, some strategy, a touch of tenderness, and tragedy.

Though I have to warn you: The Protagonist is an old bloke.

Read at your own risk.

(As thanks for taking the time to read this post, here's the Crew being... friendly. Shoutout to Mael for the banging illustration.)

 

FoundForester

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I'm in the middle of a rewrite. I've gotten through the first 5 chapters so far. I'll review you're first five chapters if you wanna review mine.
I'm more looking for someone to pick it apart and see what still needs work! Here it is if that sounds good to you!
 

AstaVanderspeigle

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I'm down for whatever.
Well, I have a Mecha BL in a dystopian world. I honestly haven't had anyone to review it since I started writing it; a review swap would be appreciated. I checked your first chapter, and it seemed longer than mine; my chapters are around 2k words. If you want to swap, let me know how many words yours have, so we can swap fairly :blob_cookie:

 

StoneInky

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Heyo. Everything is in the title. I need feedback for a specific story I wrote which is more or less Solo Leveling but the ensemble cast is stuck at a shitty rank. You can get me to read your stuff in return, or just the roast the shit out of the fic. I'm down for whatever. Here's a brief summary:

A Warning For Those That Transcended Humanity

Wanna see low-ranking Texan criminals taking on contracts that requires them to kill or maim high-ranking super-powered folks?

Cool, me too!

I promise you: Cool fights, urban fantasy, a ranking system, some strategy, a touch of tenderness, and tragedy.

Though I have to warn you: The Protagonist is an old bloke.

Read at your own risk.

(As thanks for taking the time to read this post, here's the Crew being... friendly. Shoutout to Mael for the banging illustration.)

First Impression:

Oh no, the ladies are hot. I am not lesbian, but the lady with the freckles and the lady in the lab coat are making me feel a certain way. Gosh.
(>///////<)

Dude with the skeleton mask on is cute too, I wanna cough.

Okay. Back to proper reviewing. The cover art of the actual novel is sadly not as beautiful, but I'll take it. The synopsis also tells me what I need to know, so no problems there either. Let's move onto the actual story.


Thoughts on the Story:

The first paragraphs were nice and solid.

Then the chapter gives me meaningless filler to establish the characters. We get a bunch of characters introduced, one after the other, each having their own paragraph. It's too much. I skimmed past all of it cuz I cannot remember the traits of like, five characters in a row. A smarter idea would be to only describe two or three, have them squabble and talk and be established in the viewer's minds. Then, in later chapters, like 2 or 3, introduce the rest of the characters slowly. Insert them into the group one by one.

In the middle point(?) of chapter one, we finally move onto the plot. But we're given background exposition on the situation, and it's boring.
Three whole paragraphs of telling instead of showing. Long boring explanations. Readers are like toddlers. If we see bits of veggies or facts, we spit the novel out.

Even later on, there's more telling instead of showing. You do not need to explain everything. I see bits like, 'Rohan tried to add some nuance into the discourse'. We know that. We can see that. This is not Animal Planet. You don't have to unnecessarily clarify as if this is a documentary, because it's not. Instead, focus on the little details and descriptions, like how he fidgets or looks down to the ground with little square tiles.

The novel continues. I see lots of dialogue, which is nice, but I'm having trouble keeping track of all the different characters cuz of the reasons from before. Many of them also speak in long sentences, and it feels unnatural to me. Dialogue is best shortened up, and tossed around in fragments, like salad. Not dumped as boring speeches into the novel. Yes, when Ingrid lashes out, or when the newbie speaks about his past, it does feel like they're giving a speech.

I quit here. I would have liked to continue, but I could understand none of what was happening. There was too much going on all at once, with only the exposition barely clarifying things. You may say it's my fault. I skimmed through the explanations. But you shouldn't need them to make a novel understandable and fun. This is a fantasy novel, not a maths textbook. Work hard on fixing that and you'll find more readers.
 
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AimeEmile

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I'm in the middle of a rewrite. I've gotten through the first 5 chapters so far. I'll review you're first five chapters if you wanna review mine.
I'm more looking for someone to pick it apart and see what still needs work! Here it is if that sounds good to you!
Well, I only have one chapter, but sure. I'll read your stuff!
 

AimeEmile

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Well, I have a Mecha BL in a dystopian world. I honestly haven't had anyone to review it since I started writing it; a review swap would be appreciated. I checked your first chapter, and it seemed longer than mine; my chapters are around 2k words. If you want to swap, let me know how many words yours have, so we can swap fairly :blob_cookie:

Sure thing. I'll read your stuff. Mine is actually 20 000 words because it's an independent pilot. Therefore, you can take your time reading my stuff.
 

AimeEmile

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First Impression:

Oh no, the ladies are hot. I am not lesbian, but the lady with the freckles and the lady in the lab coat are making me feel a certain way. Gosh.
(>///////<)

Dude with the skeleton mask on is cute too, I wanna cough.

Okay. Back to proper reviewing. The cover art of the actual novel is sadly not as beautiful, but I'll take it. The synopsis also tells me what I need to know, so no problems there either. Let's move onto the actual story.


Thoughts on the Story:

The first paragraphs were nice and solid.

Then the chapter gives me meaningless filler to establish the characters. We get a bunch of characters introduced, one after the other, each having their own paragraph. It's too much. I skimmed past all of it cuz I cannot remember the traits of like, five characters in a row. A smarter idea would be to only describe two or three, have them squabble and talk and be established in the viewer's minds. Then, in later chapters, like 2 or 3, introduce the rest of the characters slowly. Insert them into the group one by one.

In the middle point(?) of chapter one, we finally move onto the plot. But we're given background exposition on the situation, and it's boring.
Three whole paragraphs of telling instead of showing. Long boring explanations. Readers are like toddlers. If we see bits of veggies or facts, we spit the novel out.

Even later on, there's more telling instead of showing. You do not need to explain everything. I see bits like, 'Rohan tried to add some nuance into the discourse'. We know that. We can see that. This is not Animal Planet. You don't have to unnecessarily clarify as if this is a documentary, because it's not. Instead, focus on the little details and descriptions, like how he fidgets or looks down to the ground with little square tiles.

The novel continues. I see lots of dialogue, which is nice, but I'm having trouble keeping track of all the different characters cuz of the reasons from before. Many of them also speak in long sentences, and it feels unnatural to me. Dialogue is best shortened up, and tossed around in fragments, like salad. Not dumped as boring speeches into the novel. Yes, when Ingrid lashes out, or when the newbie speaks about his past, it does feel like they're giving a speech.

I quit here. I would have liked to continue, but I could understand none of what was happening. There was too much going on all at once, with only the exposition barely clarifying things. You may say it's my fault. I skimmed through the explanations. But you shouldn't need them to make a novel understandable and fun. This is a fantasy novel, not a maths textbook. Work hard on fixing that and you'll find more readers.
Thanks! Yeah most of the issue with pacing stems from the fact this was supposed to be a one-shot.

I'll try to see what I can do to make it more digestible.

Also the cover was not made by Mael, I did it on my own with free assets hence the change in quality.

You need help with anything?
 

StoneInky

Heart of Stone, Head of Ink
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AimeEmile

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If you like to read BL, yes. If you do not, no need to bother. I'm reviewing for fun anyway.
https://www.scribblehub.com/series/1497625/best-friend-obsession/
Oh, I don't mind. (I'll go through it after wrapping up my homework.)
If you like to read BL, yes. If you do not, no need to bother. I'm reviewing for fun anyway.
https://www.scribblehub.com/series/1497625/best-friend-obsession/
Seeing your criticism, I think what I'll do is split the pilot into 5 parts: "Intro", "1st contract", "2nd contract", "Underworld negotiation", "Epilogue" to cut the length of the general text, and see when to introduce each character.

You'll be down to reread the pilot once I finish rewriting it?
 
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StoneInky

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Messages
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Oh, I don't mind. (I'll go through it after wrapping up my homework.)

Seeing your criticism, I think what I'll do is split the pilot into 5 parts: "Intro", "1st contract", "2nd contract", "Underworld negotiation", "Epilogue" to cut the length of the general text, and see when to introduce each character.

You'll be down to reread the pilot once I finish rewriting it?
Sureeee! And splitting the pilot sounds like a great idea!

You don't have to introduce them strictly one at a time, it's just that all of em in the first few paragraphs was too much.
 

FoundForester

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Oct 6, 2023
Messages
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28
Overall? I’ll give it 10 Smelkes out of 3 Elite toenail filings. This is very solid. Characterization is strong, worldbuilding is definitely there, but the flow gets a little awkward sometimes, and there are a handful of typos sprinkled in.

But we’ll get to all that.


Starting with the intro:

“Traffic jams. Always, at all times, and at every turn, there is a traffic jam.”

This is good. Concise. Sets the tone well. But it’s almost too concise—it doesn’t let me visualize the scene. It tells me what’s happening but not how it feels.

Something like:

“Traffic jams. Always, at all times. No matter which way you turned, how many backstreets you knew, or how insistently you honked and shoved the Prius out of your lane, there would always be another bumper blocking you in.”

That gives not just the idea of traffic but the sensory chaos. Noise, movement, frustration. But your dialogue is more of the hook here anyway, so maybe this minimal intro works fine as-is.

Speaking of dialogue, really good overall. But it’s just off by a hair from being fantastic. It’s hard to explain, so I’ll give some examples.

“Swear to God, Rohan! We are not going to grab KFC for the fifth time this week!”

That “KFC for the fifth time this week” feels a little wordy and unnatural, like the info is being squeezed into the line instead of coming out naturally. It’d probably work better as a sharper back-and-forth. But I get that you’re using this early scene to introduce the whole cast, which does bog things down a little. This would be amazing in a comic or show where all that extra context could be delivered visually—in body language, expression, outfit, etc. In prose, it starts to feel clunky.


Then there’s this bit:

“Oh my god! Who fucking cares about past glory? The reality is that we are stuck in this shitty middle-ground. We do not have the luxury of being civilians expecting to be saved, nor are we useful enough to actually go and save people, or even be paid. We suck that’s all!”

This is great, but a few word choices pull me out of it. “The reality is” and “nor” are just too formal for a raw, profanity laced rant. Also, the line

“Her poor attitude could be explained by her rough background, but it made her widely unpopular among the rest of the crew.”

This is telling and not showing, I hate. only because the rest of the story is good enough to not need it. The way the crew reacts to her already shows she’s unpopular. Cut that sentence entirely and let the dynamics do the work.

If I were editing this, I’d go with something like:
“Oh my god! Who fucking cares about -your- past glory? We’re stuck in this shitty middle-ground. We do not have the luxury of being civilians. No one’s coming to save us. We sure as hell aren't useful enough to actually go and save people... Or even be paid. We suck, that’s all!”

This feels more like a rant to me. More natural. The emphasis on your adds a layer of tension too. like maybe Ingrid feels Benjamin focuses on himself too much, and it’s starting to grate the rest of the crew. IDK maybe I'm over thinking

Another line that felt off:

“Yeah. Be thankful Oscar is there to tolerate you.” chipped Dora in.

This doesn’t sound like something a 19-year-old would say, it also misses a chance to show the team dynamic more organically. I’d expect Dora to talk past Ingrid, not to her face, knowing it might start a fight. Something more like:

“Oscar, how do you deal with this chick?”
or
“Oscar, she’s being a bitch again!” She said under her breathe.

That feels more real. But again, I’m a dialogue snob, so take that with some salt.

One more thing—your dialogue tags. Stuff like:

“Why…?” inquired Dora nervously.
“It pays well.” he answered nonchalantly.

This stuff is weighing your dialogue down. The tone is already clear from the words themselves. You don’t need to spell it out. “He said” or “she said” is fine, most of the time. I do this too (way too much), which is why I’m gonna yell at you about it: STOP. Or don’t. It’s kind of a style thing, but if you’re trying to streamline, this is an easy win.

There’s also some bloat and redundancy here and there.

For example:

“A more solemn silence dawned on the crew. Maurice had to leave his beloved New Orleans behind, and no matter how much he craved going back to his grandparents’ in Lafayette...”

The “beloved New Orleans” and “craved going back to his grandparents in Lafayette” are basically saying the same thing. Pick the stronger emotional hit. I’d keep the grandparents—it’s more personal, more human.


And then this chunk:

“He knew he could not come back unless he proved himself. More so for his own ego than his family, if he was being honest with himself. That bum needed to be useful, otherwise he feared becoming the worst version of himself. That desire was burning, just like his loyalty to Benjamin. He wanted to improve, no matter the cost.”

Feels like too much introspection for the frenchie in the moment. If he’s already that self-aware about his ego and motivations, where does he have to grow? If it’s not his POV and it’s just narration, then it feels kind of like an info dump. I’d either let that unfold slowly or hint at it more subtly.


TLDR:
This is a strong, character-driven piece with great potential. The dialogue is so close to being incredible, the worldbuilding is solid, and the character dynamics shine. It’s just weighed down a bit by overwritten exposition, a few clunky lines, and some pacing drag.
 

AimeEmile

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Apr 9, 2025
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Here Crown of Ashes and I'll check out your in return
Sure thing, thanks.
Overall? I’ll give it 10 Smelkes out of 3 Elite toenail filings. This is very solid. Characterization is strong, worldbuilding is definitely there, but the flow gets a little awkward sometimes, and there are a handful of typos sprinkled in.

But we’ll get to all that.


Starting with the intro:



This is good. Concise. Sets the tone well. But it’s almost too concise—it doesn’t let me visualize the scene. It tells me what’s happening but not how it feels.

Something like:

“Traffic jams. Always, at all times. No matter which way you turned, how many backstreets you knew, or how insistently you honked and shoved the Prius out of your lane, there would always be another bumper blocking you in.”

That gives not just the idea of traffic but the sensory chaos. Noise, movement, frustration. But your dialogue is more of the hook here anyway, so maybe this minimal intro works fine as-is.

Speaking of dialogue, really good overall. But it’s just off by a hair from being fantastic. It’s hard to explain, so I’ll give some examples.



That “KFC for the fifth time this week” feels a little wordy and unnatural, like the info is being squeezed into the line instead of coming out naturally. It’d probably work better as a sharper back-and-forth. But I get that you’re using this early scene to introduce the whole cast, which does bog things down a little. This would be amazing in a comic or show where all that extra context could be delivered visually—in body language, expression, outfit, etc. In prose, it starts to feel clunky.


Then there’s this bit:



This is great, but a few word choices pull me out of it. “The reality is” and “nor” are just too formal for a raw, profanity laced rant. Also, the line



This is telling and not showing, I hate. only because the rest of the story is good enough to not need it. The way the crew reacts to her already shows she’s unpopular. Cut that sentence entirely and let the dynamics do the work.

If I were editing this, I’d go with something like:
“Oh my god! Who fucking cares about -your- past glory? We’re stuck in this shitty middle-ground. We do not have the luxury of being civilians. No one’s coming to save us. We sure as hell aren't useful enough to actually go and save people... Or even be paid. We suck, that’s all!”

This feels more like a rant to me. More natural. The emphasis on your adds a layer of tension too. like maybe Ingrid feels Benjamin focuses on himself too much, and it’s starting to grate the rest of the crew. IDK maybe I'm over thinking

Another line that felt off:



This doesn’t sound like something a 19-year-old would say, it also misses a chance to show the team dynamic more organically. I’d expect Dora to talk past Ingrid, not to her face, knowing it might start a fight. Something more like:

“Oscar, how do you deal with this chick?”
or
“Oscar, she’s being a bitch again!” She said under her breathe.

That feels more real. But again, I’m a dialogue snob, so take that with some salt.

One more thing—your dialogue tags. Stuff like:



This stuff is weighing your dialogue down. The tone is already clear from the words themselves. You don’t need to spell it out. “He said” or “she said” is fine, most of the time. I do this too (way too much), which is why I’m gonna yell at you about it: STOP. Or don’t. It’s kind of a style thing, but if you’re trying to streamline, this is an easy win.

There’s also some bloat and redundancy here and there.

For example:



The “beloved New Orleans” and “craved going back to his grandparents in Lafayette” are basically saying the same thing. Pick the stronger emotional hit. I’d keep the grandparents—it’s more personal, more human.


And then this chunk:



Feels like too much introspection for the frenchie in the moment. If he’s already that self-aware about his ego and motivations, where does he have to grow? If it’s not his POV and it’s just narration, then it feels kind of like an info dump. I’d either let that unfold slowly or hint at it more subtly.


TLDR:
This is a strong, character-driven piece with great potential. The dialogue is so close to being incredible, the worldbuilding is solid, and the character dynamics shine. It’s just weighed down a bit by overwritten exposition, a few clunky lines, and some pacing drag.
Thank you very much for the detailed review.

I can definitely see that, being originally a one-shot, bogued down my writing because I needed to express too many things with not enough time. I ppreciate the encouragement and the examples and I'll make sure to do my part in fixing those issues.

You need beta reading for anything too?
Here Crown of Ashes and I'll check out your in return
Thank you for the very detailed review as well! (Sorry, I did not check my story right away, thus did not see your comments.)

I'll be sure not to disappoint and will give you a proper review as well.
 

AimeEmile

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If you wanna check out the first five chapters of this that'd be great. You don't have to check out all five chapters, That's just as far as I've gotten in the rewrite. I'm still gutting everything after that
Okay, I'll add it to the pile. Thanks again for your help.
 

Fairemont

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Your story sounds pretty cool. I can take a read!

If you want to review mine at all it is linked in my signature.

I'll put up a review after Ive read as much as I can.
 

AimeEmile

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Your story sounds pretty cool. I can take a read!

If you want to review mine at all it is linked in my signature.

I'll put up a review after Ive read as much as I can.
Well, you're in the luck I just finished reviewing the first five chapters of every story I was asked to, on Scribble and Royal Road.

I'll get to it immediately.

Disclaimer: The pilot I wrote is way too long, so don't worry I'm already working on fixing it, by splitting it into different parts, and making the writing more fluid.

Nonetheless, I'll be glad to get more insight into it. (And potentially some insight regarding the contracts and fights, beyond the messy prologue, since it's definitely the worst offender in terms of clunky writing.)
 
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