- #1
Okay the first 11 or 12 chapters are all background/building chapters where the sword starts to become familiar with his surroundings and gain skills and power upsSpoiler
because you see later that his attack alone isn't even a match for common steel swords and daggers, so he actually needs quite a bit to set off
[collapse]. The story picks up after he meets his owner and travels to a town so that his owner may become an adventurer. There they learn various things about the world, trying to find out where he came from (who made him), classifications of swords and whatnot and begin the life of an adventurer.[As of chapter 27]As far a characters go even though some of them are quite cliche like the elf guild master and dwarf blacksmith even one has there own unique personality and so far none of them are just there to be a peanut gallery.In contrast to what other people thought of the first 11 or 12 chapters, I actually quite enjoyed reading them probably because 'Game Elements' novels are my favorite types but also because this is probably the only novel I have read with a non-living protagonist. So I was just wondering how a sword could do things all that time without bothering to think of whether it was repetitive or 'boring'