Honestly, I almost gave up on this book when after a third of the way in the plot it was mostly a horror-thriller serial killer novel with very little in the was of meaningful scifi (nor litRPG, as the title implied.) Sticking with it, the author moved the story and plot more into the scifi realm and a more interesting plot. There is a hefty amount of existential philosophy interleaved with spiritual biblical passages and, while Jeremy Robinson claims that it was not his intent to proselytize, the main character centers his personality around saving other characters through biblical influences. Even so, the blending of metaphysics and biblical teachings was a good attempt to find common ground between the two, all the while wrapping it around a serial-killer plot. My major disappointments were two-fold; the lack of adequate backstory for the antagonist other than vague hints of his scientific prowess and the lack of any scientific underpinnings of the technology that was created and was very integral to the acceptance of plot.

R.C. Bray and Jeffrey Kafer, both being top-tier narrators, performed well, but seemed unnecessary. It would have been better if there would have been either one of the two male narrators and a female narrator.

If you enjoy stories that seek to find common ground between the secular meta-physical realm and the spiritual biblical realm within the backdrop of a thriller, you should find this enjoyable.