Culture Review: Ready Player Two deserves a ruthless force-quit - GAMERGAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATE!!!

https://thespinoff.co.nz/books/07-12-2020/review-ready-player-two-deserves-a-ruthless-force-quit/

Nine years ago, the author Ernest Cline published the monster hit Ready Player One. Somehow, despite being a huge gamer nerd, Sam Brooks managed to avoid it – until now. We also made him read the sequel, which came out last month. Sorry, Sam.

Ready Player One is an ode to the kind of white nerd culture that has taken a quite deserving beating in the years since its release.

Here’s a passage that occurs not far into the sequel, Ready Player Two:

We lost our virginity to each other three days after that first kiss. Then we spent the rest of that week sneaking off to make the beast with two backs at every opportunity. Like Depeche Mode, we just couldn’t get enough.

Throughout this book’s bloated 384 pages, I kept coming back to this passage. Not only is it a symphony of bad writing, but each sentence builds on the previous to create a weird mini-narrative that is remarkably disrespectful of both the story and its readers.

The first sentence by itself? Fine. It’s not elegant, and it skates over a significant development in two major characters’ lives, but it’s not inherently offensive. The second? Simply reading the unironic use of “the beast with two backs” makes you feel worse about the narrator, the author and yourself. And the third? Well, that’s the worst thing to happen to Depeche Mode since the 80s clocked over into the 90s.

However, there is one good thing about this passage: it quite handily illustrates nearly everything that is wrong with Ready Player Two. So, in the interest of making lemonade from rotten lemons, I’ll use this passage as a way to interrogate where Ready Player Two fails, and how. Again, for emphasis: And how.



We lost our virginity to each other three days after that first kiss.

To catch you up a bit on Ready Player One: it’s set in 2045, after climate change and an energy crisis has pushed the world into a tech-dystopia. To escape their grim reality, people hook into a VR-type situation called the OASIS, which is one part MMORPG and one part social substitute. James Halliday, a barely-veiled Steve Jobs and the creator of OASIS, dies and leaves behind a series of clues, all relating to his obsession with 1980s pop culture. Anybody solving these clues will gain access to his vast fortune and also control of the OASIS. The plot follows socially awkward nerd Wade Watts as he figures out all the clues, and the book ends with him being literally on top of the world, essentially a somewhat benevolent tech dictator.


The prose of Ready Player One was fairly rudimentary, but you could forgive that due to some pretty inventive world building and action set pieces. In the sequel, though, Cline takes a full step back, ditching any sort of elegance or beauty in favour of getting through the plot as quickly as possible. The prologue of Ready Player Two skips through what could, and should, be a novel in itself: a new system called ONI, which takes virtual reality one step forward by allowing users to step into and experience other people’s lives, is discovered by Wade in the first few pages. Over one scant chapter, this technology becomes an addiction for the entire planet. The conversation where Wade and his allies from the first book, Samantha, Aech and Shoto, decide to release this technology to the public is rendered thusly:

We didn’t make our decision lightly. We weighed all of the pros and cons. Then, after a heated debate, the four of us held a vote.

Why not show us that conversation? There is meaty philosophy to wrangle with here. Just what are the implications of giving the public access to a technology that, in effect, allows them to enact any fantasy without any material consequences? Instead of addressing this Cline vaults over it in a few sentences.

The entire book is written this way – as though it’s been written by someone editing the Wikipedia page for the book. Even when the novel’s actual plot begins (another quest, albeit with higher stakes) the only time that Cline’s prose really takes off is during the action sequences. Even then the writing has the cadence of a precocious child recounting a fantasy game they played with friends during lunch. Every sentence reads as though it should be prefixed with a breathless “and then”.

I’ll take enthusiastic world-building over dispassionate plot progression any day. Unfortunately, the book has significantly more of the latter. Cline is the kind of writer who will devote multiple paragraphs to explaining the new security system of Wade’s billion-dollar home, and only one to Wade losing his virginity to the love interest, Samantha/Art3mis, of the previous book.

Then again, maybe we should be thankful he only devoted the one sentence to it.

(To fend off the nerd-pedants, there is a second more oblique passage, earlier in the book: “I was truly, madly, deeply in love with Samantha. And I was still reeling from losing my virginity to her just a few days earlier.” )

Then we spent the rest of that week sneaking off to make the beast with two backs at every opportunity.

About halfway through, I wondered if I was being too harsh on Cline. Maybe his simplistic, overly-explanatory and surface-level prose was his way of getting us inside the head of Wade. The awkward nerd of the first book turns tech billionaire in this one, and he dives into those excesses rampantly. He abuses his newfound omnipotence in every way possible, although the reader is reminded, in a way that feels editor-lead rather than author-lead, that Wade is aware that he’s being a jerk.

This is most egregious, unsurprisingly, in his treatment of women. Early on in the story, Wade starts cyberstalking his ex-girlfriend: “Since I’d already violated her privacy, I decided to go full-on Big Brother and have a look at her headset feeds.” To Cline’s credit, he presents this as the huge moral transgression that it is, but he quickly forgives Wade, and handwaves any lasting damage that his actions might have.

The backbone of the plot involves Wade seeing the world through the eyes of Kira, the unrequited love of Halliday (the Steve Jobs stand-in) through the ONI. He relives her experiences and slowly begins to build an understanding of this woman. But even this is facile, and Wade’s understanding is summed up, as so many things in this damn book are, with one sentence. After spending some time inside Kira’s head, and her lived experience, he feels “closer to [her] now, more aware of her as a human being”.

If you feel gross or weird about that, it’s because it’s gross and weird. The idea of VR as some revolutionary technology to hardwire empathy into people is one that’s long been criticised, and I’d frankly say debunked. VR doesn’t make you aware of somebody else’s experiences, it makes you hyper-aware of the limits of your own experience. Even if we were to go along with Cline’s idea that being inside Kira’s head makes Wade a more understanding, empathetic person, none of that is borne out by how Wade thinks, talks or acts for the rest of the novel. He’s still the omnipotent global dictator that he is at the start of the book, just with more awareness that he’s a jerk.

But awareness means nothing without action, and Wade still acts like any socially awkward nerd acts when he’s given a modicum of power, let alone unlimited power: he’s an absolute asshole. And the way Cline writes him, he’s an asshole who can only express himself in cliches, run-on sentences stuffed with more proper nouns than an acceptance speech, and exhausting cultural references.

For example, the below moment is meant to be a climactic moment of understanding between Wade and his poor girlfriend Samantha:

“I remember,” I said. “After she died, you would rewatch those movies, to feel closer to her, and to better understand who she was. I remember telling you that I did the same thing with my dad’s comic book collection, after he died.”

Look, there’s a minute chance that Cline is so inside the head of his protagonist, Wade, that his poor prose is a choice rather than a reflection of his ability. You know, like Lolita without the paedophilia. But Wade Watts is no Humbert Humbert, and Ernest Cline is sure as shit no Vladimir Nabokov.

Like Depeche Mode, we just couldn’t get enough.

At least Prince is dead so he didn’t have to read how Ready Player Two depicts him.

One of the force-quit moments for readers of Ready Player One was deciding they were simply unable to deal with the barrage of cultural references. They were cacophonous, and if you’re in Ernest Cline’s demographic then chances are you enjoyed them. There’s nothing wrong with that – god knows if there was a book called It’s Me Cathy that pulled together references to the Bronte sisters, Kate Bush and all things in between I would not care to hear any criticism of it.

Cline’s use of pop culture in his novels is nerd wish fulfillment at its most ridiculous. It asks the question: what if your deeply specific knowledge of cultural touchstones could actually solve all your problems, rather than just make you deeply annoying at dinner parties? Ready Player One answered that question with varying degrees of success, while ignoring the fact that Wade’s skill was just a moderately deep knowledge of ’80s pop culture. It’d be more remarkable if Wade, as a white nerd, didn’t know about Star Wars at all, for example.

Cline runs into an inevitable problem writing about the past from the viewpoint of the future: the present is going to get in the way. So while the cultural references of the first book might’ve been fine in 2011 – and that’s a terse stretch of the word “fine” – a book populated solely with nostalgia for art made by white nerds is not going to fly in 2020. (Which is to say nothing of the bizarre logic of these kids being obsessed with ’80s pop culture, which is like if teens these days were obsessed with ’40s pop culture. Again, give me that book.)
Wishing that Cline had a bigger pool of references feels like wishing upon a monkey paw, which I can only assume is curled up something fierce in the author’s home. Still, I don’t think anybody would have expected him to write a sequence in which his protagonist is offered sage advice by DJ Spinderella from Salt ‘n Pepa rapping the chorus to ‘Push It’.

That’s just a few pages, though. Even worse is an entire section, an act even, of the book being devoted to Prince. While told energetically, Cline seems to fail to understand any of what made Prince a once in a generation talent: he blended genre, bent gender, and transgressed both industry and art, all within the boundaries of pop music. Prince probably would’ve hated everything about Ready Player Two, not just his own depiction, which reduces him to “The Royal Badness” and little else. (Cline’s understanding of gender is too much to get into at length here. You can probably guess it’s not great, but it’s worth bringing up the moment where Wade encounters a trans woman, and Cline spends the next few pages interrogating his sexual response to her. Moving on.)

So yes, Cline’s references to art made by women and people of colour is deeply tokenistic, but so are all his references. It was better in Ready Player One, when those references were grafted onto a plot about an impoverished kid triumphing against a mega-corporation, but in the second book, where that same kid is a multi-billionaire, reading those references feels like watching a snake gag on its own tail and then throw up. Cline isn’t a good enough writer to weave the references in elegantly, so there are horribly awkward sentences like this:

This had to be Kira’s drunken stepfather, Graham – who was clearly enraged, and only keeping his distance thanks to the cricket bat that Og was clutching with both hands and brandishing threateningly, like Shaun of the Dead.

Yikes. Not only does the reference take the reader out of the horrifying, triggering situation, that’s not even what Shaun is called in Shaun of the Dead! He’s just Shaun. It takes a special lack of talent to combine bad writing with soulless writing, but Cline’s managed to do it. In the world of the novel, he’s taking from the graveyard of culture to honour what is long past and forgotten. In the real world, he’s cashing in on the love that audiences have for his artistic superiors.

The one saving grace of the Depeche Mode reference, the unfortunate chaser to a cursed cocktail, is that it comes early enough in the book that you won’t feel bad putting it down. Enjoy the silence.

Ready Player Two, by Ernest Cline (Century, $37) is available from Unity Books Auckland and Wellington.

Take a drink every time you see the phrase "white nerd".
 
Do you know where their absolute hate of this series comes from?
I had a friend who is a fan of the series explain it to me thusly:

The books aren't all that good or anything, they're not trying to be, they're simple self-indulgent fun that touches upon the old style of sci-fi, where you were supposed to enjoy the ride and the characters. You know, like old adventure serials or the likes of Buck Rogers. It has its good moments, its bad, but the general idea is that you're enjoying the ride. If the books came out a decade and a half ago, the Ready Player series would have come and gone, a simple bout of trashy sci-fi with some heart behind it. Unfortunately, we live in the present day.

Sci-Fi is absolutely fucking dominated by absolutely shit writers who think that they're the fucking gods of the industry because their friends have effectively blockaded the industry to ensure only their chosen ones get in. This is how shitheads like NK Jemisen and Chuck Wendig have a fucking career. And if you aren't one of them, and you start to get attention despite never kissing the ring, they want you fucking destroyed.

So along comes this little shlocky book series, that by all accounts, isn't all that great, but people are enjoying it because in a world where basically every form of entertainment is trying to preach to you the glory of identity politics, it's choosing to just.... Not do that, and just be the stupid little bit of sci-fi it's always been. It winds up riding this to a groundswell of support, and someone realizes this might be profitable as a movie. Spielberg takes interest, and turns it into his best opening weekend in a fucking decade. And to rub salt in the wound, it makes full use of its gamer identity, the very one that they spent a decade and a half demonizing.

So now it's successful despite never bending the knee and never once recognizing its "betters" within the cult of woke, the champion of a battle it never really had any intention of trying to fight, but now it's there and the cult will never forgive it for daring to not kiss their asses. In any other world, the series would be remembered as the entertaining bit of pulp stupid it is, but it's now the hero we need, if certainly not the hero we wanted.
 
What really bugs me about the universe is they imply that everyone in the entire world is able to afford this advanced technology. Like, really? I understand it’s the distant future, but VR is as common as cell phones? At least in the book, I remember Wade saying he doesn’t have the newest model.
 
I'm torn about this article. On one hand, Cline is one of THEM. He's a soy-swilling, fart-sniffing, Trump-hating, SocDem, woke, SJW pinko. He pumped a bunch of Lefty shit into RPT (even more than was in RPO) in order to fly the woke flag. They're ripping one of their own to shreds, and I love it when these retards cannibalize themselves.

On the other hand, it's clear that the THING responsible for this book review seriously missed a lot while reading RPT or was just too stupid to understand it. It's really irritating when someone goes off on a tangent, acting as if they've pegged something down to the sub-atmoic level, when they clearly didn't grasp a lot of the subject matter. The book is a first person narrative, written from the viewpoint of the main character. Wade/Zee is a socially awkward nerd who has been an OASIS-addicted shut-in most of his life. So the book is written like a socially awkward uber-geek explaining something to his buddies, bad jokes and all. The "beast with two backs" line is something a dork like Wade would say as an awkward joke. The line about the cricket back "just like Shaun of the Dead" wasn't referring Shaun the character, but was saying "JUST LIKE IN THE MOVIE SHAUN OF THE DEAD" in nerd shorthand. Obviously the he/she freak that wrote this article just doesn't GET it.

I liked Ready Player One. It was fun dumb entertainment, just like the pop culture it so lovingly references. I like Cline's second book Armada because it's a love letter to the sci-fi I grew up with. But I really didn't like RPT. All the woke bullshit, like Zee crushing on a tranny while broken up with Arty, or him going on about all the queer sex he experienced using the ONI rig...it was all just really jarring and brought the narrative flow to a grinding halt.
 
There is a sequel to Reddit Player One? Why?

Because Ernest Cline wants more money.

And he went turbo-woke in a vain effort to appease the wokescolds who have this irrational hatred of his book. It's one thing to hate RPO for being a shoddy written hackjob book (and it is) but to hate it for purely political grounds and try to tack on all this strawman bullshit onto an obviously apolitical book about a dork sperging about the 1980's that was written by a left-wing beardo no less, is one of the few things more spergy than Cline himself.
 
Ernest Cline is a left-leaning woke beardo and he dialed up the woke for his shitty sequel. And for some damn reason, they're still crucifying him for writing a spergy book that's the equivalent of a popcorn flick.

What more do these people want from him?
They want him not to be successful.
 
There is one fucking line from the movie that I will never forget. There’s a scene where Wade is talking to the evil CEO of Evil-Corp, who tries to convince Wade that he is totally hip and a real videogamer. And I shit you not, Wade turns to him and says
“A fanboy can always tell a hater.”
:stress:
 
One of the reasons why the book is getting a worse reception this time, aside from Usual Suspect types already knowing RPO exists and therefore that it's a valid target, is that 'woke' tangent. Because it turns out that, once again, there's no way to win at it.

Cline failed the first time in their eyes by having his protagonist show a display of homophobia and shock and horror that his best friend had a vagina all along and while he got over it he still couldn't stop thinking of the person he had known for years by their fake identity. This time, he fails because he wrote that people enjoy tranny porn [where they literally get to experience the position from the other sex, including the hormonal responses that their super VR goggles give them], because he finds out that the closest character to himself in this sequel is a self-loathing tranny whose gender is 'I get off on VR porn' who only exists so his ex can feel jealous of him for finding a new girl after three years, and his statement that love is love and it doesn't matter what you look like.

To them, this is just as bad as if Cline had murdered the 41% because he's 'displaying outdated preconceptions', like he's not a guy who's old enough to be their dads and thus HAS to be perfectly showcasing a perfect world, even though every single LGBT character is portrayed as being morally superior to Wade to begin with, between Aech being married and happy, L0hengrin being his fanboy and yet a much saner person in terms of wants, and Wade learning to better himself via being a virtual woman at times.
 
One of the reasons why the book is getting a worse reception this time, aside from Usual Suspect types already knowing RPO exists and therefore that it's a valid target, is that 'woke' tangent. Because it turns out that, once again, there's no way to win at it.

Cline failed the first time in their eyes by having his protagonist show a display of homophobia and shock and horror that his best friend had a vagina all along and while he got over it he still couldn't stop thinking of the person he had known for years by their fake identity. This time, he fails because he wrote that people enjoy tranny porn [where they literally get to experience the position from the other sex, including the hormonal responses that their super VR goggles give them], because he finds out that the closest character to himself in this sequel is a self-loathing tranny whose gender is 'I get off on VR porn' who only exists so his ex can feel jealous of him for finding a new girl after three years, and his statement that love is love and it doesn't matter what you look like.

To them, this is just as bad as if Cline had murdered the 41% because he's 'displaying outdated preconceptions', like he's not a guy who's old enough to be their dads and thus HAS to be perfectly showcasing a perfect world, even though every single LGBT character is portrayed as being morally superior to Wade to begin with, between Aech being married and happy, L0hengrin being his fanboy and yet a much saner person in terms of wants, and Wade learning to better himself via being a virtual woman at times.
Remember, a lot of this stems from the fact that the people shrieking loudest think you need to be told, at all times, what the right thing to think is, because you are too stupid to make any determinations on your own.
 
I thought the book/movie was the most astroturfed shit ever and I'm saddened that there's a sequel, yet this article manages to be worse than ten sequels to ready player one.
 
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