Christopher Fletcher’s life was the pits. He certainly didn’t expect to join an organization dedicated to rescuing and befriending magical beings, but here he is, fresh out of training and already facing down gods who sneeze thunderstorms and whisper secrets to the trees. Armed with the title of Healer—an honor as perilous as it is rare—he’s prepared to cure divine ailments without touching anything that will kill him with its very nature.
Guided by the ever-resourceful Regina and her flower-tailed fox companion, Fletcher journeys through the portal from earth to meet the peaceful, mystical Nakamamon and the myriad gods ruling over life’s smallest wonders. But his job isn’t without its quirks: grateful gods can be generous, and Fletcher soon finds himself wielding powers that grow with each... well, let’s just say, he didn’t expect his strength to rely on his dating life.
Join the Divinity Rescue Corps and step into a world where healing means risking everything, adventuring with friends means charming divine beings, and the greatest mysteries lie just beyond the portal.
Entertaining romp, great dialog, fun characters with senses of humor, portaling to alternate worlds, bad decisions, puns. Enjoy the escapism!
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Started off great! Very different scenarios and descriptions of both inanimate objects all the way to the "monsters" and the people around, never saw mana being handled the way it is here, so I'd genuinely give a thumbs up for the originality alone.
There's a few minor flaws that can get some using to, such as introducing too many recurring characters all at the same time and then proceeding to not describe their appearances a few times after their first time, to make the readers remember them. Especially with how unique everyone looks to be, it's very hard to remember if this one character was the blue and green person with dots or that one the graceful black and white with stripes (just a poor example).
For the worst decision in my opinion was this world's antagonists. The whole kindergarten bullies did not land at all. It would've been so much better and more than enough to have the sickness being the real problem the protagonist had to face, the guardians still had more than enough of a role with having to defend people from gods and nakamons with rabies or whatever, instead we got some guys who would never have been hired because there is no way people wouldn't see their greed and inferiority complex at first sight, making it obvious they wouldn't be a fit to... anything, in the new world.
At most, if absolutely necessary we could have this kind of conflict happening on the earth side instead, during the R&R part of the story, instead of ruining the wonderous fantasy one.
Finishing up... the author has talent in the writing itself, a lot of originality for all kinds of new things such as names, descriptions and the world itself, but I personally got so frustrated with the kiddy sh*t show interrupting such a fantastic world, setting and cool characters that I just can't really recommend this.
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Weird in all the best ways with a good balance of character development and world building with well written smut albeit a bit short but it’s somewhat frequent so that makes up for it
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This silly gem is one of my favorite stories on the site.
The grammar is good. Nothing but an occasional typo.
The story is whimsical and silly and totally engaging. You will curse when you catch up to release because you won't want to wait.
The characters have enough depth. We aren't subjected to chapter after chapter of backstory but they're not cardboard cutouts.
The humans seem to all have their hormones set to college dorm levels then turned up to 11 with magic that also gives everyone a semi-LSD-like experience. Its fantastic!
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