Saturday, June 6, 2015

Sword Art Online: Aincrad vol. 1 by Reki Kawahara

Today's review will be about:

THE SUMMARY
READ THE NOVEL THAT IGNITED THE PHENOMENON!
In the year 2022, gamers rejoice as Sword Art Online - a VRMMORPG (Virtual Reality Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game) like no other - debuts, allowing players to take full advantage of the ultimate in gaming technology: NerveGear, a system that allows users to completely immerse themselves in a wholly realistic gaming experience. But when the game goes live, the elation of the players quickly turns to horror as they discover that, for all of its amazing features, SAO is missing one of the most basic functions of any MMORPG - a log-out button. Now trapped in the virtual world of Aincrad, their bodies held captive by NerveGear in the real world, users are issued a chilling ultimatum: conquer all one hundred floors of Aincrad to regain your freedom. But in the warped world of SAO, "Game Over" means certain death - both virtual and real...

MY REVIEW
Since I was a little girl. I've always been into MMORPGs like Runescape, Star Trek Online, and Star Wars: The Old Republic, among many others. When I was in middle school, I suddenly got into a new (to me) genre of TV: anime. And it was only a couple of months ago that I stumbled upon a show that melded my two favorite things into one beautifully told story. That was Sword Art Online.


Now, I know what you're thinking: that sounds just like Spy Kids 3, and that was one of the worst things that was part of my childhood/life. No way I'm checking this out! Well, dear reader, I am very (I repeat; VERY) happy that it is nothing like that mashup of actors and bad scenes that was Spy Kids 3. It's very easy to like the introverted, awkward character that is Kirito, and the determined, powerful girl that is Asuna.

"It's just a video game, right?"
When we're playing video games, whether it is on XBox, Playstation, Wii (okay, maybe not Wii...), or PC, it is impossible sometimes to count the amount of times that you've died. But in this world, there are no second chances, which is SO terrifying! If I played Tomb Raider like this, I would be dead in no time! (Though playing it with NerveGear would be the coolest!) And since everyone's real faces and body are downloaded into the game, you know what people really look like in the real world. No dudes playing as girls, no more super hot babes everywhere you look (let's admit it, we all do it...), everyone simply looks, well, normal.

Why would I want to look like myself if I could look like Lara Croft? -sips tea- or a super badass chick?
In all seriousness, this book really made me think about video games, and whether or not the relationships we have in them with random strangers are real or not. I think that, in reality, they are real. I might not have ever met that person in real life, and maybe we will never talk to each other irl (in real life), but that doesn't mean that they're meaningless either. When you finish a series and almost feel like you lost a good friend in finishing it, the feelings that you have are real, even if the characters themselves aren't. And, in a way, you grow with the characters as well. You go where they go, you feel what they feel, that sort of thing.

Whoa, sorry, I sort of got really deep there...
"Hey, say something... Are you lagging?"

In conclusion, if you've watched the anime or not, this book is definitely something that you should have on your bookshelf. It's funny, it's sad, and it's characters will have you question a lot, and that makes one good story.

Let's do it! :D
A LITTLE EXCERPT
"An impossibly huge castle of rock and iron, floating in an endless expanse of sky.
That is the entirety of this world.
A tireless, month-long survey by a team of fanatical experts found that the base floor of the fortress was more than six miles in diameter, just large enough to fit the entire Setagay ward of Tokyo inside. And considering the one hundred floors stacked one on top of the other, the sheer vastness of the structure beggared the imagination. It was impossible to estimate the total amount of data it all represented.
Inside the castle were several bustling cities, countless smaller towns and villages, forests, plains, and lakes. Only one staircase connected each floor to those adjacent it, and these staircases were located within dangerous mazes filled with monsters. It was difficult just finding them, much less reaching them, but once someone had cleared the stairs and arrived at a major city the next floor up, a teleport gate linking the two floors would open in every city below, allowing all players instantaneous travel among the various levels of the castle.
It was thus that, over two long years, its inhabitants slowly but steadily conquered this giant fortress. The current human frontier is the seventy-seventh floor.
The castle's name is Aincrad, a floating world of blade and battle with about six thousand human beings trapped within. Otherwise known as -
Sword Art Online."

Well, that's all for now!
See you next time!
~Sea-Solo

EXTRA! EXTRA!

Watch a trailer for the anime!:

Look at the page for a video game that is currently being developed;
Age of Aincrad!