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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars tis a great book
I had played and beaten the game when i read the book and i have to say i like the ending in the game better than the books ending but overall tis a great book and it answerd my question: « were the heck does Kratos put all his gifts from the gods.» i just hope theres gonna be a book for gow 2
Published 11 months ago

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18 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The God of War is rather a bore
This is a book I really wanted to like. While I'm familiar with neither the God of War game nor the fiction of Robert E. Vardeman, Matthew Stover is one of my very favorite writers and the cover blurb made the story seem very much up Stover's alley. Unfortunately, whereas it seems many of the best-acclaimed novels based on video game franchises (like Halo and Gears of...
Published 20 months ago by Nathan


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18 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The God of War is rather a bore, June 3, 2010
By 
Nathan (Wilmington, DE United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
This is a book I really wanted to like. While I'm familiar with neither the God of War game nor the fiction of Robert E. Vardeman, Matthew Stover is one of my very favorite writers and the cover blurb made the story seem very much up Stover's alley. Unfortunately, whereas it seems many of the best-acclaimed novels based on video game franchises (like Halo and Gears of War) tell stories set around and between the events of the games, this novel is directly based on the first game in the God of War series and, I can only imagine at Sony's behest, hews so closely to the events of the game that it reads more like a glorified strategy guide than a novel in its own right.

Over the course of these 300 pages, the book reads exactly like a video game set to prose. The main character Kratos kills innumerable hordes of monsters; as he faces increasingly powerful monsters, he gets power-ups in the form of gifts and artifacts from various gods and mythological figures. Later on, the flood of monsters slows to a trickle and instead there are more puzzles involving timing and jumping and miniquests to find keys to unlock doors, and the overall impression is that while video game puzzles may pleasurably kill many hours in a game, they don't make for very interesting reading, especially when they're being solved by a character who hasn't changed or grown or become any more likable between pages 1 and 250, by a character whose life seems dictated more by the demands of the plot than because he's got any sort of personality or wit or cleverness about him (more than once monsters stand around and wait (quite graciously) for Kratos to recover as he collapses exhausted for "long minutes"; at one point he kicks a notch in a rock wall with his sandalled feet).

As for Kratos himself, he's a brutal, unstoppable and virtually indestructible sociopath, haunted by an atrocity he committed a decade ago but apparently not haunted enough to refrain from slaughtering noncombatant citizens left and right in the present; rather than seeking to make peace with himself through atonement or by any other means, his response to his shame has essentially been to redirect his destructive lifestyle. He's basically a big baby who wants the gods to relieve him of his painful memories but is unwilling to do anything for himself other than spread more pain and death in the world. It's very hard to square the pain and shame he feels at this terrible act in his past with his utter lack of remorse or regret for any of his ongoing terrible acts, and the novel doesn't really manage to develop his personality to an extent that this makes sense. It doesn't help that throughout the novel he is the only significant character aside from the gods; every other character is basically an NPC who wanders into the book for a paragraph or two, fulfills his or her purpose and is never heard from again. Every so often we do switch to Athena's point of view as she conspires or quarrels with other gods on Olympus; these diversions from Kratos are welcome but rarely tell us much that we don't already know.

Overall, this book is a tremendous wasted opportunity; for a book "offering deeper insights" into the events of the game, it stays much too loyal to gameplay mechanics and puzzles, at the expense of any opportunity for character development that might earn a more satisfying emotional payoff. Games and novels are two different media and in striving to adapt this story from one to another too literally, this epic quest for absolution and vengeance has been reduced to rather a bore. To the writers' credit it is readable, no mean feat given the restrictions of the project, but I can't imagine that it has much to offer fans of the game, and only rarely do the authors' styles have the chance to shine through. Not recommended except to the most die-hard fans of the game or the authors.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing portrayal of a great game, July 9, 2010
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
It's the love for the game God of War that lead me to pre-order this months earlier. I loved the game so much I wanted to read about it too. The story is what makes GOW franchise legendary. Thats what I wanted to read. Read the story of Kratos. But this book just took me through the game.

I found myself skipping pages after pages where the author has described every single move Kratos makes while killing Harpies or minotaurs. It felt like the author has written book while playing the game. This is not what I wanted to read. I played the game. I didn't want to read about it too. What I expected instead, was to read the story behind Kratos. About Kratos, Zeus, Athena, Kronos, Hades, Gaia, etc. Thats what I wanted to read. Not how Blades of Chaos kept slashing left and right, page after page after page.

This is my first time reading a book of either of the authors. Book's well written. But it simply does no justice to the great story behind Kratos. There is soo much more. I'm still hoping someone would do justice to this great game with the pen.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Whats the point?, September 6, 2010
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
I read a few pages of it and put it down, because I have the game, actually all of them, and beated them all. I gotta tell ya I'm huge God of War, it's my favorite game series of time.
And they've published a book on the game, how stupid is that? I finally realized, this book is like a copy of the first game, and I finally said to hell with it. Now, I guess they made this book for people that are fans of the game, or series, but suck at it.
And now they have a book based on the game, and they can read it, then figure out the ending for themselves, so they don't have to stress themselves out on the game.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars watching youtube doesn't equal research., December 14, 2011
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
I don't know. Maybe it's just me and being me means being a gamer as well as a writer. Being a gamer means you take time out from the real world to step into that of another reality and be fully immersed in it. Its physics, its language, its... well, everything.

So here you have two guys, one I'm familiar with in Matthew Stover, and another I'm not familiar with in Robert E. Vardeman, writing a book based on a game I've spent a lot of time with and I can tell they didn't play the game. The exorcising of specific scenes or series of events, the opting out of battles with estimations of what happened here and there; the complete removal of the game's language and the game's narrator -- which, as anyone who's played the God of War series, is an integral character to the overall story -- and the insertion of unnecessary scenes. They watched youtube instead. That was their research. That was how they dipped their toes into the blood stained waters of God of War and mingled with the folks that live in that world. Youtube.

I imagined that this novel would be a further exploration of the character of Kratos as he goes through the labor imposed upon him by the Olympians. It isn't. It doesn't really explore Kratos as a character at all. In fact, the games do a much better job at exploring and explaining Kratos actions and reactions than this book ever does.

Centered around the events of the first game, what we have here is a really sad version of the game that lacks the power, the beats, the articulation, the awe, and the immersing quality of the mythological world that Kratos lives in. It reads like a knock off of a badly written sword and sorcery novel in the vein of Conan, and never crawls out of it.

And that's a shame because the story of Kratos and his personal war against the Olympians is one to be experienced.

This book is not.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars tis a great book, February 26, 2011
This review is from: God of War (Kindle Edition)
I had played and beaten the game when i read the book and i have to say i like the ending in the game better than the books ending but overall tis a great book and it answerd my question: « were the heck does Kratos put all his gifts from the gods.» i just hope theres gonna be a book for gow 2
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars GOW, June 26, 2010
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This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
This is a good book. It covers the bases from game 1 to game 3. It has a lot of graphic scenes too, making you feel like you're right there watching it(if you have an imagination). I would give it 4 out of 5 stars. Think it is a great book, but not the best that I have read.
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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars fans of the fantasy game, May 31, 2010
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
Kratos the warrior knows that serving the Gods of Olympus means being a monstrous murderer. He accepted his fate as a slave but feels being labeled by his fellow Greeks as a murderous monster is unfair when Ares or Athena demand you do their bidding; saying no is not an option until now. The chains of the Blades of Chaos that bound him are broken as the Gods apparently abandoned him to his conscience as the Ghost of Sparta.

Hermes taunted Athena with news that her pet mortal was considering entering Hades. She is stunned and upset but believes Kratos' downfall into thinking of suicide started with the Grave of Ships mission that set sail on the Aegean; leading him to an inferno engulfing Athens. His freedom from doing the biddings of Olympus was to kill Ares the God of War; someone Kratos loathes for atrocities on humanity that the God made him commit. Athena advised Kratos that the Blades of Chaos, the weapon he is bound to, is the only thing that could kill the God of War. He sought to confront Ares; with his goal that one of them will die, which one did not matter to Kratos.

Clearly intended for fans of the fantasy game, God of War provides an intriguing mythological thriller with an underlying message to watch what you wish for as sometimes you get what you asked for. The story line is fast-paced from the moment Athena thinks back to the adventures that led to her mortal pet being depressed and suicidal. Game players and Greek mythos readers will especially appreciate Kratos' "final" (if he survives the Gods are a capricious crowd toying with their inferiors) quest.

Harriet Klausner
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome, August 31, 2011
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This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
Wow thank, i got that really fast, and the book is in excellent condition, i look forward to reading it.
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2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Want the game in book form? Good, because that's all you get..., September 29, 2010
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
I'm not a huge GOW fan by any means as I see Kratos as an unlikable character with no emotion and hardly any intelligence as he blames the gods for everything bad in his life, yet he wasn't a very good guy before the gods intervene in the first place. However, as the gameplay is rather enjoyable I recommend that if you wish to introduce yourself to this bland attempt at creating a modern myth, just play the game instead as the book is exactly (and I do mean EXACTLY) the same as the game, down to the description of every little mini-game moment and other lackluster details. It adds nothing new to the story and even to hardcore GOW fans and collectors it is a waste of money and a disgrace at adding depth to an already depth-less franchise.
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1 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Video Game to Book...hope this doesn't catch on., June 13, 2010
This review is from: God of War (Paperback)
Books based on video games may conceivably work, but not here. Not only is this book a total drag, even for this fan of the game, but the author screws up the biggest unanswered question of the game: Who is the gravedigger? He'd have us believe it was Zeus in disguise. Isn't it obvious that the gravedigger is Ares himself? His disguise is about as transparent as Clark Kent's!
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God of War
God of War by Matthew Woodring Stover (Paperback - May 25, 2010)
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