Video Games were invented long ago not only for a sense of achievement but also for catharsis purposes as well. All of us know that the motive of the video games was never physical exercise. These games put in our minds a sense of achievement as we enter the dream world and start getting things that we actually cannot have in the real world.
Eric Ugland talks about the dejected life of a person who had enough with life and then finally one day he thought of killing himself so that he can free himself from all the miseries. He was about to shoot himself when an offer just seized his finger that was already on the trigger. It was a chance to enter the game world where he would become a different thing.
First, it looked odd to him, and then as he moved on and thrived in the quest he started liking the fake world. However soon he realizes that this new world is not that much fake either. The one who dies in the game world vanishes from the real world too and that is an alert for all the players.
Montana the tank warrior has a powerful outlook but then every player has a weakness too. Seas the Day and War of the Posers were for the adults and this book has something for the kids in it. Neil Hellegers has also narrated rather softly so that the kids can also digest it easily. The idea of the virtual world gets stronger after listening to this specific book. The game world is presented as a way out for those who are living a frustrated life.