

There is little to no politics and if I had to read all that irrelevant combat that lasts for dozens pages a time and training I would've given up long ago.



Now don't get me wrong, there is tech advancement and some battle are interesting but that's about it. Even space combat gets boring if it lasts a couple dozen pages. After those 5 chapters it gets better but still instead of your usual space opera with politics, technology advancement and building + some space battles, this is combat combat combat combat and most of it is unfortunately boring ground combat, killing lizard alien #1 in detail up to killing lizard alien x 100000. Yep, it's really boring so those parts I skipped and read only those concerning politics and destined not to be main character director of Star Force. It's not, all chapters or parts are really long and the first 5 are military training, imagine reading dozens of pages in a row of dodging paintballs, taking out paintball turrets, hand to hand combat. I really liked that and expected the same here. I found this series because of Return of The Ancients this author wrote as StarGate fic. I'm reviewing up to Star Force 32, not just this first part. Mind blown, he and the other A7 candidates are then told that they’re not here to help, but to LEAD the hopeless war on the horizon, where victory does not lie in defeating an ancient enemy, but in simply finding a way to survive it. The A7 program, listed only as 'Looking for the Best of the Best,’ has but a single prequalification.a sub 5:00 mile that Paul's track team skills qualify him for.įiguring he has nothing to lose, Paul takes the Star Force tests expecting to fail, but soon finds himself accepted and whisked away to their headquarters where he learns the truth about the space corporation…and the secret alien threat that it's been created to prepare Earth for. Wanting to be a part of the adventure but not qualifying for any of their highly competitive jobs, his chance of joining looks to be nil until one day a new Star Force recruitment package opens up. Paul Taylor is in his last year of high school, watching along with everyone else in the world as the megacorporation known as Star Force leads the nations of Earth into space.
