A Gamer's Wish by Tao Wong

Hidden Wishes #1

A Gamer's Wish is a LitRPG Urban Fantasy about Magic and Wishes in the Real World

A gamer's wish

Given the opportunity to make his dreams comes true, Henry Tsien decides to make a wish that will change his life forever. Now a newly created, low-leveled Mage in a world that has hidden secrets and histories, he'll need to find a way to survive, level up and pay his rent.

A Gamer's Wish is a GameLit novel with some game-like elements.

***NOT AVAILABLE FOR TRANSLATION ,THANK YOU FOR YOUR UNDERSTANDING***
 

Genre: FICTION / Fantasy / Urban Life

Secondary Genre: FICTION / Fantasy / Contemporary

Language: English

Keywords: urban fantasy, litrpg, gamelit, virtual reality, minority character

Word Count: 63772

Sales info:

A Gamer's Wish peak paid rank was #367 on Amazon.com in March 2018

Since then, it has fluctuated in rank significantly, with 1 new release since 2018. At this time, the book is ranked 184,000 on the Amazon.com store. A third book that will end the series will release in 2020.


Sample text:

Simple curiosity. That was all it took to change my world.

My life changed with a black briefcase one spring evening. It had a 1960s design, a perfect rectangle made of black leather with a number-combination lock, still in pristine condition. It was the fifth and last piece of luggage I had purchased earlier that day at the lost luggage auction—and the most expensive piece. Unless I was really lucky, I might make enough for a week’s groceries from all this. At some point, I knew that I had to find a new job, but lucky for me, retail jobs were a dime a dozen right now. If you were willing to take late-night shifts at least. Still, that was a concern for future me.

Luggage like this always left me wondering about its story. The smell of the leather, the faintest hint as I held it to my nose, told me it was probably genuine. Maybe it was a hipster throwback, a handmade piece for people with more money than sense, but something told me it was the real deal. A genuine 1960s briefcase. That raised a number of questions: Was it an old purchase, set aside and never used till recently? Perhaps given to a new graduate, a present to commemorate their graduation? Did someone buy it at a thrift store, a discarded piece of luggage that wasn’t wanted or needed till it was unceremoniously lost and abandoned again? That was, after all, how it had come into my possession. The airport auctioned off uncollected lost luggage every sixty days after it entered the system.


Book translation status:

The book is available for translation into any language except those listed below:

LanguageStatus
Portuguese
Already translated. Translated by Caio Cardoso
Spanish
Already translated. Translated by Mercedes Alemán
Author review:
Work was done and no complaints

Would you like to translate this book? Make an offer to the Rights Holder!



  Return