Epyonnn I already dmed you my full-length notes, so here is a short review that summarizes the 3 major points.
1. Synopsis Needs Work
- It basically summarizes the first seven chapters and it doesn't make the reader become intrigued or find the novel different from other isekai novels.
- The synopsis also needs to be broken down into smaller paragraphs because mobile readers have smaller attention spans.
- The synopsis also needs an overarching conflict that hooks the reader throughout the story. In 1984, it's Big Brother, for example.
2. No Overarching Conflict
- Though if a laidback approach is your niche, then it's fine but it's hard to keep readers interested if they don't think the story will be satisfying. By satisfying, I mean, a deeper conflict that will or is occurring throughout the story and will be resolved by the end of the book. Resolution is subject to opinion ofc.
- This should be stated in your synopsis, as I said earlier.
- This should be stated in the first 3 chapters somewhere as well. I already talked to you about what it is for your story, so I'm sure you can do the editing.
3. Too Much Telling, Little Showing
- You tell us a lot of stuff and everything is almost written in an exposition format, causing it to feel like it's not actually happening in the moment.
- Show us what's happening, and the reader will believe it and see it through the MC's eyes. It's not enough to just describe something with a fancy adjectives or label the clothes a person is wearing. You have to describe the importance of the clothes + why the setting is "picturesque". Why is it important that this setting is "picturesque" or this person looks like "this"? If the reader doesn't feel like it's important, then they might skim and feel bored.
--> one example(it's not great but u get the point): "I put on my lucky green cap. It had been sitting in my closet for months, accumulating a sense of forgetfulness to the point I let the memories slip by through my fingers. Dad gave this cap to me at our first baseball game, and my green cap was the last thing I had of him since he died."
- Basically, you need to show us why it's important if describing things like clothes. If not, it should be used as a visualization technique so that the reader can actually immerse themself in the story.
--> This goes for your description of the MC's appearance in the game. There are a lot of details at once, but it doesn't make me visualize the appearance in any way. ex. "I was six feet and three inches tall. I had a ripped body of a Jojo character, and my handsome face could smother any woman or man" you get how it feels like a lengthy list of outward character traits. This is something that stays in the writer's notes, instead. In the story, one should focus on a key few traits and describe them to the reader to help visualize the experience.
Hope this help :)