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The Trains of Keldora: An Automation Crafting LitRPG Adventure (Factory of the Gods Book 2)

  • Based on 453 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Saturday, May 18
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Format: Kindle


Description

After victory over the Chained God, Julian’s work is just beginning. One month after being stranded on a fantasy world and finding his place with the town that has welcomed him, Julian is ready to upgrade his Godcore to the next tier and expand the Factory. But he might have waited too long. The Gods of the Green are on the move, and have dispatched a team of high ranked Adventurers backed by a vicious Nature Goddess. Surrounded by sabotage, hostile forces, and the never-ending demands of the Factory, Julian is in over his head. He’s going to have to innovate his way out of this mess. Good thing Julian always has a plan. If he can’t overpower his foes, he’s going to have to outproduce them. Read more


Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 9, 2020


Language ‏ : ‎ English


File size ‏ : ‎ 2989 KB


Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled


Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported


Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled


X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled


Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled


Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, May 18

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Alternative Title: How To Kill A Goddess.
There have got to be hundreds of ways to do so. My personal favorite is show off the inconsistencies, inaccuracies, and lies that pervade her faith (all faiths have them because they are built by humans), but confining her in an vacuum chamber, or feeding her through an industrial shredder, or using the Force Equation to hit her with a massive amount of kinetic energy, or blowing her up with tons of explosives, or a mixture of two or more of the aforementioned methods would likely be a much faster way to do the deed. Fortunately this isn't my problem, I just need to rate this book and recommend that you start the series with the first book, _Wastes of Keldora_, because this is a good Isekai/LitRPG series for those who enjoy works of those to genres. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2021 by Charles Daniel Christopher

  • I am very disappointed
The proofreading was...deficient. Massively deficient. Frustratingly deficient. ‘Brake’, not ‘break’; ‘to’, ‘too’, & ‘two’. The worst part is the places where puns are used appropriately, making the obvious mistakes all the worse. Other than that, it’s actually quite enjoyable. The characters and concepts are excellent. Edit: an update has been uploaded since my review. I have not re-read the novel to see if the proofreading has improved (I hope it has) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2020 by Wildwily

  • I might come back and finish it... but probably not
I like the general feel of this series, but the details are awful. My biggest hang up is that you can put a stick or a rock into you bag of holding, and have it magically turn into x amount a resource depending on how big it is. Then you build a giant drill, and it breaks, and you what? Throw it in a scrap pile somewhere and forget about it? Use you dang magic to rebuild it! It has all the resources you need right there, and they are pretty much exactly as they need to be to boot! Your magic world bending rock can’t fix locked piston and smooth some damaged metal!? And you can’t just go and collect the spent crossbow bolts? If your shooting off hundreds an hour, and your attacked 2-3 times a day, collecting a few hundred crossbow bolts for repair/reuse should be no problem! Yet somehow every time something breaks or is used, it’s still around, but now unusable for some reason... Next, we are building things, lots of things, but we have to place it on the surface, the god core apparently can’t dig... except when placing telephone polls, those stick in the ground just fine... so a none of our buildings/ railroad tracks/ walls have any foundation, they are just a perfectly built thing sitting on a very imperfect ground, that is not level and will shift under during the cold freezes... The whole science meets magic premise falls apart because e author decided to focus too much on the game, and ignore that he’s supposed to be placing this in an existing world, with physical and magical laws, not some half baked idle game... ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2020 by Andrew

  • Trains VS Gods!!! Woot! Woot!
I loved this one too. Please keep them coming. The Factory has most of the things I need in a book in spades. Plus more of the things that make all books good. The character relations ships and arcs are excellent in this series. Never stop writing.
Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2022 by joshua leines

  • Good Story
This story of a idiot savant engineer being summoned to a world were the rich and powerful are using the poor and downtrodden as free experience. He uses reinventing Earth things to combat them.
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2021 by Goody

  • What a ride... a train ride!
You guessed it. The gamelit factory story has trains. As in the factory levels up industry enough to start making trains. And it is awesome. This story is great because it focused a lot on the nature of gods versus other gods in a way the first book didn’t have time to, and also addresses some of the concerns you might have for an Industrial Age factory being near where you live... All in all, fun story. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2020 by Cameron C.

  • Good story, but...
A good premise, but lots of flaws. Biggest one is the "pollution" that is in the story. Somehow a few smelters and boilers produce enogh pollution to kill off a field of plants? Needs to be addressed cause plants love Co2 and thrive in it, only way the ground would kill plants was if toxic chemicals were dumped there, which they werent, and the only pollution should be steam. Pacing is also bad, one month and its spread to a 1/2 mile away? Thats impossible. Also, 1st book said they were in a hole surrounded by a mountain range and forests, how can there be such flat ground for a train? ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2020 by arandomdude6

  • Short but sweet.
Very similar to the first book. We get character growth, industrial progression, and overcoming hostile heroes in about equal measure. It feels somewhat abbreviated compared to the more wide ranging adventure of the first book, and there's a couple plotlines that were pretty much just dropped - I assume they'll be picked up in the next book. However, these are relatively minor complaints All in all, a fun read thats surprisingly fast pace. Five stars. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2020 by bestcoaster

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