Kill the Sun
List of reviews made by users for the Kill the Sun novel.
37 users have written reviews for the Kill the Sun novel and rated it with an average score of 4.6 out of 5.
37 Reviews
Peak. Best light novel I've ever read, author's work is full of surprises and so it makes for a very exciting story. Power system is always adhered to, it must've been thoroughly checked, I just hope the ending isn't rushed.
Pretty much a peak novel.It starts out weak and it's expected fo start as such because the mc is a child with the weight of growing up alone where danger lurks everywhere.But as he grows up and he develops we see one of the best character development oat with a mc that his writing is deep and written excellently.Honestly it also has really great written characters that you love them in just 1-2 chapters.Don't get me started on the ppwer system and the battles of this novel which are the best part of it.Pretty much a VERY good written novel that is one of the most enjoyable reading experiences
It is really good light novel. But most it is dark. Very dark there are very less light scene. Most of the time MC cause death and destruction. And say I will repent. He is just causing more trouble. May be now he will do some good. Or may be he will mess up again.
Almost all of his life is very dark I think he will kill most of humanity by saying he will save it.
If you're a dark fantasy fan then start reading this masterpiece it's absolutely peak. Best dark fantasy I've ever read.
and this isn't for the faint hearted people.
Honestly, The Main Lead is just so much trash. For those who still have not read the novel, the MC has got a very big hero complex and is the biggest hypocrist I have ever seen. Everywhere he goes, people just die because of him and then he gets PTSD because of it and start making lame excuses for it. The MC characters is flawed and the character developement of this novel sucks. This author just don't know true character development. He did the same with Lighting is the only way 𝙖𝙣𝙙 Sword God In a world of magic. All of the main characters are with severely flawed personality. This guy gets no bitches, all the waifus die because of him, he kills his best friend, his saviour and gets PTSD because of this. Also, it finished with a bad ending(he becomes emperor of humanity and then go on to live a happy life alone) . The whole plot of the story is SCP inspired and it had almost as much potential as Shadow Slave but the author literally ruined it. No wonder not many people talk about it.
Its definitely a good book. I especially recommend if you've read one of the authors other books, you know what you are getting into, and its also much better written than the others imo.
It's just peak. Def in the top 10 of the best novels I've read.
If you don't know whether you should read it or not, trust me and just go and read it.
Warmaisach does it again, i love how in his novels things have actually weight, actions have consequences, the MCs can and will commit mistakes, becoming stronger its not easy and he makes sure that the reader understands that.
In "Kill The Sun", we explore so much about human psyche and the limits of morality, the bad side of society is exposed for us without no filter, there are some events on this novel that are incredibly gruesome and disgusting, and when you are almost losing hope in the people, comes a moment that makes you remember all the good that humanity can achieve when we work together.
I truly recommend this novel
Like always, Warmaisach made another incredible story and that's to be expected he never disappoints , Started this s*it from first 200 chapters and haven't regretted it once but now the ending got me wishing for a more even tho I know it over but overall this ending was a solid one and this is a peak novel,time to read his new nove then
Under the ever-watchful Sun that never sets, a merciless warden in an unending sky, he strides toward the unknown Dusk.
Not as a hero. Not as a savior. But as a sentinel bearing the crushing weight of hope itself.
His is a path paved in ash and silence, where kindness is a memory, and duty lay the last law unbroken. A martyr crowned in suffering. A monarch of cattle.
He marches on, not in hope of witnessing salvation, but because the cost must be paid, even if the light may never reaches him.
Kill The Sun is not merely a tale. It is a dirge sung in the key of despair, a chronicle of a soul unbroken by torment, unbent by the weight of worlds.