Ratings10
Average rating3.3
The Combat Codes is set in a far future world where the fate of nations is determined by single combat at the hands of famed warriors. Perfect for fans of action-driven science fiction, martial arts stories and LitRPG novels, this debut novel, the first in a trilogy, has fans ranging from award-winning fantasy authors to trophy-winning UFC fighters! Hundreds of years ago on a planet once ravaged by war, the nations swore an armistice never to use weapons of mass destruction again. Today, battle-hardened warriors known as Grievar Knights train to represent their nations' interests in brutal hand-to-hand combat. Murray Pearson was once a famed Knight until he suffered a loss that crippled his nation - but now he's on the hunt to find and train the next champion. Below, in the Underground's brutal combat rings, an orphaned boy called Cego is making a name for himself. Murray believes he has what it takes to make it in the planet's most prestigious combat school - but he has to fight his way out of the Underground first. 'A brutal and relentless science fantasy martial arts extravaganza, set in a world where the fate of nations rests on the perfect counterpunch or rear naked choke. The Combat Codes is that rare book that fully satisfies me as an action fan' Fonda Lee, author of Jade City 'The Combat Codes by Alexander Darwin is a chimera blending Science Fiction and Fantasy to tell a vividly-realized tale both focused and sprawling. It's a book about warriors written by a master of the martial arts, and the mastery shows. In its pages, expect to explore power, politics, and brutal violence, but I repeat myself' Evan Winter, author of The Rage of Dragons 'This book kicks ass--literally and literarily!' Richard Swan, author of The Justice of Kings 'If Mike Tyson wrote a sci-fi novel (and could write like he threw a right hook) it would read a little like The Combat Codes. Bare-knuckle brilliance' Jackson Ford, author of The Girl Who Could Move Sh*t with Her Mind 'The Combat Codes was a fantastic read that takes you along the martial arts path of self-discovery. The storyline, training, fights and philosophy in the book made it highly enjoyable. Whether you are a martial artist, fan, or just an SFF reader, this book will be a lot of fun' Kenny Florian, MMA Commentator and Ex-UFC Fighter 'The Combat Codes is combat as it was meant to be written: raw but elegant, a blend of the poet's wordsmithing and the martial art master's technical expertise. Better yet, it's a fun, heartfelt story about the underprivileged banding together to rise up. A fantastic reading experience' Moses Ose Utomi, author of The Lies of Ajungo
Featured Series
3 primary booksThe Combat Codes Saga is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by Alexander Darwin.
Reviews with the most likes.
If the dude bros Wrote a book.
DNF at 56%.
This doesn't have enough women for me. Meaning any!
Yes you heard me right, there is no women. And what two that show up are a housemaid mother type figure and a healer that sounds so much like a robot its insulting.
I really want to give the author the benefit of the doubt. This is a book about fighting. It's male centered. Yes women can fight but not really against men. The world the author has set up is full of fighting slaves, a fighting hiarchary and corrupted people in power. Yet no women. I feel that the author has simply forgotten, in the society he's created, to think what role women would play. And it shows. To me, it feels like a shallow world.
The two main characters have the potential to be really interesting but it fails to deliver. The plot of the book moves rather fast too fast for any real character deveoplment or connection. Yes its a book about fighting, but it lacked the quiet moments between that makes me care for the characters.
It is clear that the author knows how to fight, but he's forgotten that the story is fiction and not a lesson. The fight scenes lack any emotion or anything interesting. To put it plain, they were boring.
Aside from the lack of women, I was bored throughout this book. And it had such a good premise.
This started a little slow for me, but once it got going, I was really invested. With that ending, I'm very interested to see where the story goes.