About This Content Warlock 2: The Great Mage Game!You have played the game – now read the book! This first-ever novel set in the rich Warlock universe, written by acclaimed fantasy and sci-fi author John Helfers, tells the story of the Great Mage Miralbus “the Hat” Card and his unlikely companion Nicolas Frost, a former Great Mage himself.Miralbus is raising an army to as he travels across the planes on his journey back to defeat the enemy that took everything from him. Entering a new world containing the Svarts, a powerful race of beings with advanced technology, Miralbus wishes to bring them to his side in his battle against the United One. But he’s not the only one who wants them.Two other Great Mages—the fearsome undead King Lich IV and the beautiful elven Dragon Queen—are also vying for their favor. Miralbus and Nicolas will have to navigate the most treacherous battlefield of all—diplomacy—to come out on top and ally with the Svarts while making sure neither of the other Great Mages wins the day. And, of course, they’re also watching each other’s back to make sure another warlock doesn’t put a spell into it…Upon purchase, this book will be downloaded to the Steam folder on your computer in three formats: epub, mobi and PDF. To read the book on your mobile device, transfer the epub or mobi file to the device and open the file in your ebook reader app. Enjoy! 1075eedd30 Title: Warlock 2 E-book: The Great Mage GameGenre: StrategyDeveloper:InoCoRelease Date: 10 Apr, 2014 Warlock 2 E-book: The Great Mage Game Free Download [License] I concur with what the poster Davor said about this relatively small novel in Steam DIscussions. It is not great literature, but it was a pleasant way to spend two hours reading it. The book is written first-person from Nicholas Frost's point of view, and details his and his employer's (Miralbus the Hat) efforts to win over a neutral Svart kingdom by convincing the Svart ruler to pick Miralbus (as opposed to the Dragon Queen or Lich VI) as ally. Neither of the three Great Mages come across particularly well in the end, with the reader sympathizing more with the Svart queen (original character) and the altruistic Frost rather than with the rather self-absorbed Miralbus. I wonder, however, why King Lich is constantly referred to as "it" by Frost, especially since his male vampires are always "he". King Rrat XLII (not the LIV) plays a minor role in the warm-up confronation in the beginning. Nefertari and Mallacir are mentioned once (with the latter explicitly mentioned to be a vampire by the DQ), but do not appear.. I concur with what the poster Davor said about this relatively small novel in Steam DIscussions. It is not great literature, but it was a pleasant way to spend two hours reading it. The book is written first-person from Nicholas Frost's point of view, and details his and his employer's (Miralbus the Hat) efforts to win over a neutral Svart kingdom by convincing the Svart ruler to pick Miralbus (as opposed to the Dragon Queen or Lich VI) as ally. Neither of the three Great Mages come across particularly well in the end, with the reader sympathizing more with the Svart queen (original character) and the altruistic Frost rather than with the rather self-absorbed Miralbus. I wonder, however, why King Lich is constantly referred to as "it" by Frost, especially since his male vampires are always "he". King Rrat XLII (not the LIV) plays a minor role in the warm-up confronation in the beginning. Nefertari and Mallacir are mentioned once (with the latter explicitly mentioned to be a vampire by the DQ), but do not appear.. I concur with what the poster Davor said about this relatively small novel in Steam DIscussions. It is not great literature, but it was a pleasant way to spend two hours reading it. The book is written first-person from Nicholas Frost's point of view, and details his and his employer's (Miralbus the Hat) efforts to win over a neutral Svart kingdom by convincing the Svart ruler to pick Miralbus (as opposed to the Dragon Queen or Lich VI) as ally. Neither of the three Great Mages come across particularly well in the end, with the reader sympathizing more with the Svart queen (original character) and the altruistic Frost rather than with the rather self-absorbed Miralbus. I wonder, however, why King Lich is constantly referred to as "it" by Frost, especially since his male vampires are always "he". King Rrat XLII (not the LIV) plays a minor role in the warm-up confronation in the beginning. Nefertari and Mallacir are mentioned once (with the latter explicitly mentioned to be a vampire by the DQ), but do not appear.
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