Alrighty! I read through the first 5 chapters and I feel like that gave me a solid feel for your style and the story overall.
First off, this thing has so much charm. From the synopsis to each chapter, the tongue-in-cheek humor and self-aware writing really shine. It’s honestly one of the most unique voices I’ve read in a while. That’s both the biggest strength and the biggest weakness of the story, though.
Your MC definitely has a distinct vibe, but right now he feels more like a caricature than a character. Like... even if you’re a hardcore isekai fan who dreams of being reincarnated as a potato chip or whatever, dying would still make you question a few things. But your MC just shrugs it off like it’s happened twenty times already. No panic, no questions, no emotional weight.
He kinda comes off like a clown: honk the nose, toss a joke, and on we go. It makes it hard to get invested in him and what he’s doing. If he's not worried, why should I be?
That said, I get that it’s still early, and there’s plenty of time to layer in more depth. I just think he needs something grounding—some real trait or emotion—so he doesn’t feel one-note. Otherwise, the humor might wear on the reader fast.
Speaking of that, I think a big part of the problem is that everyone talks in the same witty, jokey voice. Every character feels like they’re cut from the same cloth as the MC, which 1 makes the MC feel less unique, and 2 makes the humor start to blur together. If everything is funny all the time, nothing really lands. A bit more emotional variety could really help balance things out and give those funny moments more punch.
And to your credit, I think chapter 2 did this well!
Another thing I noticed is some repetition. By chapter 3, I’d read about the whole reincarnation situation like 3–5 times, plus a bunch of offhand mentions. The twist that he’s a dice is super fun! But it feels like you’re retreading that beat a bit much early on.
On the style side—your descriptions are really vivid and creative, but sometimes they feel a bit overdone. Like, yeah, the light shimmering off someone’s cheekbone is cool, but if we don’t care about the character yet, it’s hard to stay engaged. I’d suggest trimming some of those lines unless they’re serving the scene, the mood, or giving us important info about the world/characters. Maybe just space them out a little so each has room to breathe
My biggest gripe, though, is the tendency to tell instead of show. I think it’s in chapter 3 or 4 where we get a big info dump about the new world, and it just kinda... lands flat. The MC tells us “there are elves and stuff,” but it doesn’t really mean anything without seeing it in action. I'd rather watch the different races do something cool than just be told they exist.
Last thought—and this is more of a big-picture concern—is about the premise. Is the MC gonna stay a dice the whole time? If so, I imagine you'll need to rely heavily on the characters around him to move the story forward, which could be a really fun angle! Like maybe he's passed around as a good luck charm or artifact and is secretly influencing events behind the scenes. But if he ends up getting a body or something later, you risk losing what makes the concept so unique. Not sure what you’ve got planned, but figured I’d mention it.
TL;DR: Super cool premise and voice, but the humor gets a bit overwhelming at times, and I’m still not sure what the MC wants or why I should care about him yet. Looking forward to seeing where it goes!