Jinx Snowveil was born amid the blizzards of Hoth, a child of frost and silence. Discovered by Mace Windu, he was brought to the Jedi Temple, where his rare attunement to the Force—cold, calculating, but deeply emotional—made him both respected and feared. Alongside his closest friend, Anakin Skywalker, he carved a path of brilliance through the Clone Wars. But war breeds shadows, and betrayal cuts deepest when it comes from those closest.
Disillusioned and scarred by the Council’s hypocrisy, Jinx fell into darkness with Anakin, becoming Darth Nekros, the Phantom of Death—his icy powers and stoic rage a terrifying match to Anakin’s fire. For years, he served the Empire as a ghostly executioner, until the Death Star’s fall left him kneeling amidst the stars, ready to die with the life he had chosen.
But the Force was not finished with him.
Torn from death, Jinx awakens in a strange world of honor, betrayal, and bloodlines—a realm ruled not by Sith or Jedi, but by thrones and wolves. Guided only by whispers of the Force and visions of a silent, honorable warrior in the North, he must walk the line between fate and redemption, seeking the lost pieces of himself through the game that governs this world: the Game of Thrones.
This has to be one of the most confusing, poorly written stories I’ve ever seen. The author clearly has no idea how to write a proper novel. First, they claim the main character is the bastard son of Baelon Targaryen, which would make him Viserys and Daemon’s brother but then the story completely falls apart. At first, I thought this was a House of the Dragon or A Song of Ice and Fire story, but out of nowhere, the dude starts throwing in Vikings—and I’m not talking about just random Viking elements. No, I mean Ragnar Lothbrok, Bjorn Ironside, Rollo, and Floki from the Vikings TV show. No explanation, no alternate universe (AU) tag, nothing. Just straight-up forcing them into Westeros like it makes sense. Since when were Vikings running around in the North like that? Then, to make things even worse, there’s an Ice Dragon connected to the Vikings. What does that even mean? How does that fit into House of the Dragon? The world-building is a mess, the lore makes no sense, and it feels like the author is just making things up with no consistency. I really thought this story had potential at first, but this guy completely fumbled the bag. The writing is so bad it feels like it was generated by an AI that doesn’t understand the difference between Westeros and Scandinavia. Do not waste your time on this garbage.
i normally don't like books with only one chapter but I took a chance and I love it lot of word count a little fast paced pls don't drop this
ok which world then he is in Vikings or Game of thrones?