Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon

Matt Dinniman


4.00 · 10 ratings · Published: 06 Nov 2019

Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon by Matt Dinniman
A LitRPG Adventure

Fantasy meets horror in this gore-soaked, standalone LitRPG adventure!

It had seemed like a dream offer. Paint a mural. $15,000. How could Duke not jump at the chance?

But it came with a catch, as these things often do. He had to first see what his client wanted him to paint.

A private server. A digital playground. An alliance of the world’s most sadistic, most depraved minds. A place to bring their prey, to hone their skills.

Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon. Survival horror. One of the most brutal, most terrifying full-immersion games ever made. A place where fantasy characters such as elves and dwarves clash with technology, where giant monsters roam the hills, entrusted with protecting the gates of heaven from the demons who would tear it all down.

A game where one plays the last of the battlefield surgeons: a healer tasked with keeping the behemoths alive at all costs.

But on this server, they don’t care about the game. That’s not why they’re here. They’ve come because of the game’s most unique feature: Full pain. Realistic anatomy. The ability to bring their victims well beyond the body’s normal breaking point. And most importantly, the ability to bring them back and do it all over again.

Trapped in a bloody, merciless nightmare, Duke only has one goal. To survive. And in order to survive, he must play the game. He must win the game. And to do that, he must become the most cruel, most ruthless monster of them all.

This brutal, 200,000 word, standalone LitRPG novel features the following:
A co-op survival horror game where fantasy-type characters and technology clash.
Medium-heavy stats.
Lots of violence.
Stomach-churning gore.
No-holds-barred kaiju battles.
Torture-happy, paladin dwarf toddlers.
22 individual races, each with their own magical system.
A pet tapeworm named Banksy.
Dozens of kaiju, each with their own distinctive form and abilities.
Demons and angels, and you can’t trust a damn one of them.
About 200,000 words--the length of 3 books!
No harem.

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