The story was entertaining, but the main character was very two dimensional. He also seems rather inconsistent in his outlook on life, and the strangeness that is happening to him in the story. Considering the characters background, I would’ve expected someone a little more hardened to the challenges he was facing, and a less naïve outlook on the society that he was raised in. the character was most endearing when arguing with the mimic. Characters seemed to me to behave like how a middle schooler would expect an adult to behave under those circumstances then somebody with the rough childhood and dangerous career that the main character had. I actually identified more with the mimic than I did with the main character who spent way too much time lamenting over the death of people who were trying to kill him in the first place. I know sometimes storytellers, deliberately create main characters that are a little bit generic in order to make a character but a diverse group of people can all identify with. You see this in video games a lot and maybe the author was experimenting with this technique for a litRPG. I don’t regret buying or listening to this book, but I will probably not continue with the series.