Book Review: Dungeons and Drama by Kristy Boyce

Synopsis:

Dungeons and Drama is a fun YA romcom full of fake dating hijinks! When it comes to romance, sometimes it doesn’t hurt to play games.

No one loves musicals more than Riley Morrisโ€”her dream is to be a Broadway director. But when the spring show is canceled, Riley has to figure out a way to bring it back. Easier said than doneโ€”sheโ€™s stuck working at her dadโ€™s game store. The place that means more to him than his family does.

Riley can’t waste time at a dead-end job when her entire future is resting on making a name for herself. So she convinces her co-worker Nathan Wheelerโ€”the floppy-haired, glasses-wearing guy she barely knows from schoolโ€”to help her. In exchange, sheโ€™ll help him make his gamer-girl crush jealous. Plus it wonโ€™t hurt to show her egotistical ex, Paul, just what heโ€™s missing without her.

Soon Riley and Nathan are โ€œa couple,โ€ and people seem to believe it. But selling the ruse means joining Nathanโ€™s role-playing game. To Rileyโ€™s surprise, the game is almost fun. And even more surprising, flirting with Nathan doesnโ€™t require as much acting as she thought it wouldโ€ฆ

Review:

I had an absolute blast reading Dungeons and Drama. I loved (almost) every single page of this book. As a theatre kid and a gamer, this book feels like it was made for me. I do have a few slight negatives to talk about but these havenโ€™t impacted my rating in any way.

The little chapter header picture is really cute but it does irk me a little that it isnโ€™t an accurate d20. Technically the little heart would be the 20. Also what would have been really cute was if the d20 was used for the chapter numbers and then you could have used two when it got over 20. This isnโ€™t a critique of the book, just a little observation from someone that has way too many polyhedral dice. 

Choosing a bard as your class is completely valid but being a human bard is just diabolical to someone that has never once played a human character. You can choose to be any race you want and you go for the one you are in real life. Boring. Also, inviting someone to the party to be a second bard? Heinous. No one wants two bards in their party. At least bards can do some healing though and they donโ€™t have a cleric so they desperately need someone to heal them.

Also, sorry Iโ€™m being so bit picky about the D&D mechanics but players donโ€™t say โ€œIโ€™m rolling a stealth checkโ€ the DM would ask you to do that. At least in every game Iโ€™ve ever played or watched. Plus a critical hit doesnโ€™t instantly mean your character is down. They could still roll low for damage.

I was going to complain that there actually isnโ€™t as much D&D in this as Iโ€™d hoped but considering I have so much to say about the mechanics of it in Dungeons and Drama, itโ€™s probably for the best.

One part I really enjoyed about Dungeons and Drama is that the fake dating stayed fake pretty much the entire book. Riley does catch feelings for Nathan fairly early on but as far as sheโ€™s aware, heโ€™s completely indifferent to her. I adored their bickering and flirtatious banter. Itโ€™s one of the reasons why fake dating is my favourite trope. 

The progression of Riley and Nathanโ€™s friendship felt very natural and it was all very cutesy. It was easy to see why Riley fell for Nathan, heโ€™s the exact type of guy I would have liked at that age. He was surprisingly emotionally mature and honestly not at all the awkward nerd youโ€™d expect. He had some serious charisma.

Riley was definitely a little over dramatic at times but what would you expect from a theatre kid? Also, sheโ€™s a teenager that acts without thinking and often says some pretty cringe worthy stuff. Plus all romance books have cringe worthy dialogue, it comes with the genre. 

I did like seeing her relationship develop with her dad throughout the book. She starts out thinking his game store is stupid and that he doesnโ€™t care about her passions. But over time finds out this isnโ€™t the case at all. The development of this relationship goes alongside Rileyโ€™s general maturity. 

I had such a good time reading Dungeons and Drama that it would be a crime to rate it anything but five stars. I know this wonโ€™t be everyoneโ€™s cup of tea but it had so many elements that I really love.

Rating: 5 out of 5.


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