Good Game, Gamer Girl cover art

Good Game, Gamer Girl

Good Game Series, Book 1

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Good Game, Gamer Girl

Written by: Reina Zoric
Narrated by: John William Maddux, Olive St. James
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About this listen

He called me his "mystery girl" on stream. Live. In front of thousands of viewers.

The wildest part? I didn't even know who he was.

I was at my usual gaming café, grinding ranked matches in a popular MOBA game called NLA.

But instead of celebrating my latest win, I was fuming. One of my teammates had spent the entire game spewing sexist insults at me, even though I carried the match and we won despite him.

While the rank-up animation played on my screen, some guy walked up and tried to congratulate me. Tall, dark-haired, handsome, with a nerdy edge—usually, he'd be my type. But I barely glanced at him. After the night I'd had, I wasn't in the mood to entertain more fragile male egos.

Turns out, that guy was MnstrX.

Yeah, that MnstrX. The most famous pro gamer in the NLA scene. The guy who's won every single major tournament in the game—twice.

And now, he's on his stream, calling me his "mystery girl" and offering to coach me.

What do you even do when the best NLA player in the world asks to coach you?

You say yes.

What started as "just coaching" quickly became something more. Alex Thorne—aka MnstrX—turned out to be thoughtful, kind, and way more down-to-earth than I expected.

And if you think climbing the ranks in a competitive video game is hard, try navigating a secret relationship with one of the biggest names in esports.

©2024 Reina Zoric (P)2025 Podium Audio
Contemporary Romantic Comedy
All stars
Most relevant
What exactly was the plot? What was the story? Was there any conflict and resolution? Did the characters develop in the course of the story? What did one learn about the world? The answer is either no or nothing.

The only reason I read this book was because of a reading challenge where one picked a book about video games. I would have enjoyed a dry list of all the video games in the world much more than this shitastic daydreaming childish fantasy of what I assume is a GenZ author…

Perhaps one needs to have lived in the world a little longer to have a little more experience to write a book with more value in it. Or maybe one needs to read a little more and see the difference between good writing and bad.

I thought that there would be more substance, the issues of gender in gaming would have more space and elaboration in the text, that it might be a good discussion point about the book. But one gets the barest of mention of it and a very annoying “I can speak for myself”-type moment which begs the question “would you really be ok if the guy you were dating just stood there doing nothing?” When does championing a just cause become patronising?

The narrators were fine. It’s just sad that they had to voice immature underdeveloped characters. It literally felt wrong in the spicy scenes, because it felt like children were doing it.. cringy.

Immature daydreaming in book form

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