Webnovel Feedback Roasts For the Fearless

ThisAdamGuy

Proud inventor of the chocolate onion
Joined
Sep 4, 2024
Messages
1,005
Points
128
I'll never understand why people...

A. Think making every sentence a new paragraph will make people want to read their book. Maybe they think it'll make the book look longer, and that people are too dumb to know the difference between a book that's chock full of content, and the literary equivalent of padding their bra?

B. Try to pass off scripts as novels. Scripts are not novels. If you want to write a script, then more power to you, but it nobody has ever thought "Well, I wanted to read a book with descriptions of the settings, the actions the characters are performing, and everything else that books usually have, but I guess 500 pages of dialogue AND ABSOLUTELY NOTHING ELSE is just as good!"
 

GardenerKing

New member
Joined
Sep 20, 2025
Messages
14
Points
3
It not close to perfect but I you can I be thinkful The Devil Been Isekai | Scribble Hub
I don't know what you tried to say there, but God...

Having 2 coworkers talking about Isekai with your Mc wanting nothing but a lazy, uninteresting life has shot your novel in the foot. Then you have a random man pop out of nowhere without proper setup, just to have him attack the Mc for God knows that reason had turned the chapter into some cartoon episode. Finally, three light pillars come out of nowhere and genuinely that's where I stopped.
 

Abnormals

Member
Joined
May 25, 2025
Messages
36
Points
18
Are you one of those brave souls who believe your manuscript is teetering on perfection but still wake up at 3 a.m. knowing deep down it’s a disaster? Good. You’re my favorite kind of writer. I’m here to roast your work—scorch it until the ashes look usable. Think of me as the Gordon Ramsay of prose, minus the condescension and fake praise. If your story’s dialogue sounds like two malfunctioning robots reciting a phrasebook, or your pacing moves like a snail overdosed on melatonin, I’ll say so. And you’ll thank me. (Eventually.)

I won’t pat your ego or whisper empty affirmations about how your “raw passion” is shining through. I’ll wield my critiques like a rusty spork and perform open-heart surgery on your prose—messy, necessary, and unforgettable. Don’t worry; you’ll survive. Growth always hurts. But so does realizing your novel reads like someone fell asleep on a keyboard.

If you think your manuscript is ready for tough love, I’ll give it to you straight—no sugar, no spoon. You’ll cry, sure, but you’ll also crawl out of the wreckage stronger. Because what doesn’t kill your manuscript will absolutely make it publishable.

Think you can handle it? Drop your link below. Let’s fix your words before they become tomorrow’s filler on this website.
Do your worst(roast)

Last seeker

While She Remains
 

ReiHayashi

Active member
Joined
Nov 22, 2022
Messages
15
Points
43
Hello again! I've done my best to apply what you'd highlighted in your previous feedback for my edits, and I think I'm pretty satisfied with how it turned out (altho it added an extra 10k words to my draft at one point :sweating_profusely:) I'm now humbly requesting for another roast on the grill before I get too far ahead of myself :blob_hide: thank you!

The Best Revenge Is Becoming a Villiainess
 

Shadowless3

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 6, 2023
Messages
28
Points
53
Mine too, I would love to get some feedback. Anything good or bad.
 

Talon88.1

Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2025
Messages
22
Points
13
Might as well toss my hat into the ring.
 

Hads

Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2025
Messages
36
Points
8
I would love some constructive criticism. I have my wife review, but she isn't interested in the story, it could be because it is boring, or, just not her kind of story.

 

VKnives

New member
Joined
Oct 2, 2025
Messages
9
Points
3
Here is my story!
This is not broken into chapters, only scene breaks, and there's no webnovel formatting. It's just written as a continuous novel.
I think the beginning is the weakest part, so I hope it can still keep a reader's attention. This is a dark romantasy, written after researching the books published in that genre.
 

JayMark

It's Not Easy Being Nobody, But Somebody Has To.
Joined
Jul 31, 2024
Messages
1,635
Points
128
Here is my story!
This is not broken into chapters, only scene breaks, and there's no webnovel formatting. It's just written as a continuous novel.
I think the beginning is the weakest part, so I hope it can still keep a reader's attention. This is a dark romantasy, written after researching the books published in that genre.
If you want any attention whatsoever, you're going to have to accept webnovel format and break up your chapters. Readers expect it here and they use the chapters like placeholders for pausing to continue later. People will look at such long chapters and drop instinctively regardless of the quality of the writing. Plus you'll get no visibility for new releases.

My advice is to break your work into 2k word chapters, they don't have to be exact word count but over 1.5k words is important.
 

AimeEmile

New member
Joined
Apr 9, 2025
Messages
20
Points
3
I'm down for some roast. I already did one to get some feedback and tried to apply the advices I got as best as I could!


So I'd appreciate another round to see what can be bettered!
 

Tempokai

The Overworked One
Joined
Nov 16, 2021
Messages
1,392
Points
153
Hey, roast mine. My friend roasted me, so let's see what a stranger will do. :blob_cookie:


I read three chapters of your webnovel, and I’ve got to be honest—it was like being gently euthanized by boredom. I had this opened for a week on my tab on my new PC, and playing video games I had missed for four years were more fullfilling than to revive this thread from no PC induced hiatus. This wasn't just a dull read, hell no, this was the literary equivalent of watching paint dry in grayscale while someone whispers sci-fi nouns in your ear and asks you to feel something while my mind was saying "play Yakuza 7 instead, at least it has better idiots than this thread". I read a lot of bad stories—I eat wattpad-tier flops for breakfast when I have will to suffer—but this one? This one deserves its own flavor of sedation. You don’t read The Pristine so much as you lapse into it, like falling into coma after overworking and sleeping late because of a new PC after a week.

Let’s start with the obvious: yes, all the "elements" of a story are present. There’s a guy. There’s a mission. There’s fog, a bunker, some alleged trauma, and a future so generically dystopian it might as well be a setting template called "CyberGrimePunky_003." But here’s the thing—those elements aren’t a story, they’re props. They sit there like set pieces in a half assed ARG some high schooler made in his spare time. Your webnovel reads less like a narrative and more like a speculative thought experiment that got lost on the way to becoming a plot.

Just reading the synopsis alone is like watching someone Google "how to write cool sci-fi" and then refusing to scroll past the first result. It’s that dry. "In a world torn by war and shrouded in fog…" I swear I’ve read that line six thousand times and every single one was just as disposable. What’s your angle? What’s your twist? What separates this from a high school creative writing prompt handed in by a guy who accidentally signed up for the wrong class? Absolutely nothing.

And then there’s Arkam, the so-called protagonist, who has all the depth of a cereal box and half the charisma. He’s supposed to be sarcastic, I guess, but "sarcastic" here is just code for "vaguely annoyed and barely coherent." His idea of biting wit is grumbling into his specs like a guy who just found out his VPN expired. I kept waiting for the sarcasm to arrive, but all I got was lousy emotionally sedated muttering between tech instructions t-shirt. At best, he’s a dull cop with a back brace. At worst, he’s a blank slate wrapped in tactical gear who exists to walk down corridors and occasionally toss children off a bridge—literally.

And that’s another thing—what is it with this story and people slowly opening doors and walking into rooms full of absolutely fucking nothing? I have never read a more committed sequence of box-checking. Arkam enters a room. He looks around. He sighs. He fiddles with his gear. He mutters about jammers. Repeat for 1100 words. This is less a sci-fi thriller and more a gameplay description made by an AI just by looking at 1 360x240 cropped screenshot. We’ve got entire chapters where the most dramatic tension is "I wonder if the keypad will work" or "this crate is empty, too." My guy, if this is what you’re bringing to the narrative table, at least let a rat jump scare someone or a drone malfunction and kill a child. Something. Anything. I would’ve paid for that bunker to detonate and end this plot right there, starting actual story of some actual OP MC investigating why that brat had died in that easy mission.

Second chapter tries to yank the emergency brake and drop some trauma. Sure, a pregnant woman in a bunker, some children, sexual violence, a warcrime’s worth of "feel bad now" vibes. But, it’s like watching an actor break into sobs before recording has even started. It’s all cue and no build-up. You want me to feel something about that someone and her kids? Try writing her as a person first, not as a live-action plot device dumped into the bunker like a DLC backstory pack. "Please, sir, help us" is not dialogue—it’s the cheapest moral bait you can throw on the page, and it has the narrative nutrition of dry cereal.

And also, Arkam’s reaction? I can’t tell if he’s traumatized, constipated, or just vaguely inconvenienced. He’s not wrestling with morality. He’s not affected. He’s not anything. He sighs. He thinks "huh, that’s weird", like a Skyrim NPC. Then he walks out and continues doing literally nothing of consequence. If this were a video game, Arkam would be the AI-controlled tutorial guy you follow for five minutes before he dies in a scripted cutscene and you never think of him again.

Chapter 3? Chapter 3 is where the story should escalate, but given the quality of a snowball (that needs to become an avalanche for a good story) those two chapters before, it doesn't. That's reality. Instead, it pivots to bridge logistics. Children are assigned to squads like it’s Cyberpunk Babysitter Simulator 2079. The only real twist is that Arkam suddenly becomes Olympic-level child-yeeter, hurling them off ledges with no warning. Why? Because it’s more efficient, apparently. Because the author thought action was needed but forgot what tension feels like. And then after all the jumping, all the planning, all the exposition, they open another door... to nothing. Again. More empty crates. More silence. More artificial mystery stretched thinner than a mood in an elevator.

There’s no antagonist. No thing called urgency. No ticking clock that's about to explode. No goal beyond "explore this rust-covered void and think some thoughts about it." The stakes are always theoretical. The conflict is "might exist later." And somehow, somehow, the story has the gall to end each chapter with what I assume are supposed to be cliffhangers, like "we need to talk," or "what’s beyond the door?" Spoiler: the answer is always nothing.

This entire novel reads like someone wanted to write a cyberpunk story but forgot why. There’s no intent. There’s no theme. There’s not even an attempt at an idea beyond "man in bunker with gadgets meets some NPCs and walks around." It’s a shooter game script without the shooter. Just corridors, jammers, tech babble, and cold canned dialogue recycled from every post-apocalypse sloppile ever written.

If this were a writing prompt in a class, and I were your overly smug, heavily caffeinated English teacher, I’d slap a C- on the front page, write "some effort here, but no vision," and then go drink whiskey under my desk. Because that’s what this story demands—not critique. Not encouragement. Just a tired sigh and the slow realization that you wrote 10,789 words about a man walking through hallways.

Look. If you want to improve this, there’s one question you need to ask: what’s your twist? Because "sarcastic soldier goes into bunker" is not a story. "Sarcastic" isn’t a twist. "Fog" isn’t mood. "War" isn’t depth. Pick something—anything—and do something with it. Blow up the setting. Turn the rebels into clones. Make the AI go rogue. Give Arkam a secret. Hell, make the bunker a spaceship. Something.

But as it stands, The Pristine isn’t pristine. It’s sterile. Clean, quiet, and absolutely lifeless.
 
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