
Content levels
Positive tags
Protagonist archetypes
Tropes
Synopsis
Surviving the swamp was the easy part. Kaito Mori was a programmer in Tokyo. Now he's a fire dragon climbing through a world that never asked his permission to exist. He survived the fens by calculating every risk like a line of code. But to the north, in the Sundered Range, something waits that no tactic can solve: his own kind. A war between clans burns across the mountains. A Conclave of ancient dragons deliberates over a signature of power they believed extinct three hundred and fifty-one years ago—and they remember all too well the decision they made the last time they felt it. Human hunters track his heat. And from the far end of the continent, the most powerful dragon alive has spread his wings to come see him in person. Kaito doesn't want a throne. He doesn't want a war. He just wants to understand the rules before someone turns him into a piece on their board. The trouble is, this time power costs something brute strength can't pay. The Voice of the Conclave is the second book of Null Spawn : a LitRPG saga of evolution and strategy where you win by thinking, not by roaring. System, progression, tactical combat, and dragon politics—narrated by a protagonist who processes the impossible with an engineer's cold logic and a humor that won't quit, even flying into the jaws of the story. How high can a monster climb before the world decides to stop him?
Is The Voice of the Conclave: A Dragon Evolution LitRPG appropriate for my child?
Suitable for most readers 13 and up.
A LitRPG fantasy featuring dragon clan warfare, tactical combat, and political intrigue. Violence is combat-focused rather than graphic, with an emphasis on strategy and evolution mechanics.
What to know going in
This book has moderate violence, no sexual content, and mild language. Content notes include violence and war.
Publisher ages reflect reading level; our rating reflects content maturity — they can differ.
Who'll love this
Teens who love progression systems, dragon protagonists, and strategic thinking will enjoy watching a programmer-turned-dragon navigate clan politics and power.