Reviewed by inlibrisveritas on
As I stated before, this is an upper YA book. It does, in fact, have mature themes, though it is not graphic or distasteful. The main characters deal with substance abuse, which I’ll get into below, and they do have sex and party. It kind of treads a weird line between YA and New Adult, if I’m being honest and I just don’t really know where to place it. So you’ve been warned.
Kali Ling, the Warrior, is an elite gamer. She’s one of the golden few who play games at a competitive level, who spends her days training her nights partying and her weekends in a virtual reality fighting. She along with her team, Defiance, are aiming to become champions of the RAGE tournaments, a team versus team death match. I seriously hate multiplayer team v. team games, but it’s literally my favorite kind of VR story. I’m so bad at them, but THIS is the level of good I’d like to think I could be. I love everything about this setup, including the very obvious negatives of having a hyper realistic game that centers on being killed or killing someone else. It’s gritty and it has it’s issued, and I want all of that at the forefront and addressed. In this world gamers are celebrities, and they are expected to act as such. Their PR is everything and they are expected to go out and be in front of the cameras. Every drink they down or smile they give away is marketable, and it’s a black hole that is hard to escape from. It’s a world of alcohol and drug dependency. We see young people so desperate for virtual reality that they do what ever necessary to alter their own. We see Kali fighting addiction, anger, and grief. It doesn’t glorify the partying or the celebrity, and that’s the part that really made me love this.
The VR world itself is pretty awesome as well, though kind of standard for the entire subgenre. That being said, it’s still wicked cool. The RAGE tournaments are definitely a focal point, but I think what honestly made Arena stand out is that much of the story takes place outside of it. We get to see the stresses of a competitive gamer and athlete, we see the training, the strategy, the hours of studying, all mixed in with an unbalanced blend of media and social obligations. We see these characters grow and learn to take what they need, as opposed to what they want.
In short, I think this was one seriously great read. It does have this weird age level gray area that’s kind of odd, but I think the fact it goes into the battle of excess and even death is something worth noting. I look forward to reading book two when I get the chance.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 8 August, 2017: Finished reading
- 8 August, 2017: Reviewed