Can’t Get Enough RP1? Try these 25 Books Like Ready Player One
If you’re eagerly awaiting your opportunity to see Stephen Spielberg’s film adaptation opening on March 29, you’re probably wondering what else you can read to fill the RP1 void, here are 25 books like Ready Player One that will fit the bill for you.
Is your child a fan of science fiction and virtual reality? If so, they most likely enjoyed Ernest Cline’s phenomenal science fiction novel Ready Player One. Although this is a difficult book to top, we diligently searched the internet and discovered some of the best book recommendations that are very similar to Ready Player One.
We are confident that these books will keep you entertained and will not let you down. Add the following books to your list of must-reads after finishing Ready Player One!
Warcross by Marie Lu
Warcross is more than just a virtual game; it is a way of life for many people. Emika Chen, a teen hacker, works as a cyber bounty hunter.
She is in charge of tracking down illegal players. She quickly becomes an overnight sensation, and the creator of Warcross offers her an offer she can’t refuse. Emika has found herself in a perilous situation. Can she get over it?
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
Hiro works as a pizza delivery boy for his uncle’s pizza restaurant in this captivating book, but he also plays a computer game as a warrior prince.
However, his world is turned upside down when one of his fellow hackers suffers brain damage after viewing a computer image containing a dangerous virus.
What distinguishes Snow Crash from other books in the genre is its humorous take on America’s future and virtual reality. This one comes highly recommended by me.
The Impossible Fortress by Jason Rekulak
If what you loved most about Ready Player One was the nostalgia factor, check out The Impossible Fortress, the debut novel from Quirk publisher Jason Rekulak.
This novel is described as “a love letter to the 1980s and to nerds everywhere.” If he were to read this book, James Halladay would be drooling over all of the ’80s pop culture references, including Freddy Krueger, Beetlejuice, Top Gun, Commodore 64 video games, and Eddie Murphy, just to name a few.
At the center of all of these ’80s throwbacks are a sweet story of friendship and young love.
Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
This is another novel you’d probably have to be dead to have missed, especially if you’re a fan of sci-fi; however, if you’re only familiar with the lackluster film adaptation and have yet to give this book series a try, definitely check this out.
From a very young age, protagonist Ender Wiggin and many gifted children like him are trained to take on an insectoid alien species called “buggers” through a series of games that become increasingly complicated as the children get older and more advanced.
This first novel follows Ender’s growth from a precocious child to a tactical war genius. This is the first in a series, but this novel also stands alone.
Only You Can Save Mankind by Terry Pratchett
Speaking of novels about aliens and games, here’s another one! This is the first in The Johnny Maxwell Trilogy by Terry Pratchett.
Johnny thinks he’s only playing a game when he sets a new high score in the arcade game Only You Can Save Mankind. But then instead of the aliens dying, he gets an unexpected message: “We wish to talk. We surrender.”
This novel takes place during the first Gulf War, so now reading this in contemporary times, this novel might also fulfill a sort of nostalgia factor, especially with the retro games.
One Con Glory by Sarah Kuhn
If your favorite part of Ready Player One is reverence for nerdy pop culture, then this is the book for you. This quick little novella stars a self-proclaimed fangirl named Julie who lives for Buffy the Vampire Slayer marathons and comic book superheroes.
For Julie, her collection will not be complete until she scores the Glory Gilmore action figure that has eluded her grasp for years.
Then one weekend, she finally gets the opportunity to make her dream a reality, but not before “an avalanche of unexpected obstacles.” For gamers, there are plenty of video game references as well.
Moxyland by Lauren Beukes
Into the whole futuristic dystopian setting of Ready Player One? You should read Moxyland.
Set in a high-tech version of Cape Town, South Africa, Beukes’s highly imaginative novel follows four protagonists: “Kendra, an art-school dropout, brands herself for a nanotech marketing program; Lerato, an ambitious AIDS baby, plots to defect from her corporate employers; Tendeka, a hot-headed activist, is becoming increasingly rabid.
Toby, a roguish blogger, discovers that the video games he plays for cash are much more than they seem.” If this super awesome book cover isn’t enough to hook you, then I don’t know what to do for you. This one is pretty fun.
Insignia by S.J. Kincaid
This is another novel that’s the first in a series, and it’s often marketed as perfect for fans of Ender’s Game.
And since I think Ender’s Game is a great book for Ready Player One fans, this book makes the list. “The planet’s natural resources are almost gone, and war is being fought to control the assets of the solar system. The enemy is winning.
The salvation may be Tom Raines. Tom doesn’t seem like a hero. He’s a short fourteen-year-old with bad skin. But he has the virtual-reality gaming skills that make him a phenom behind the controls of the battle drones.” Are teen gamers saving the world? Sounds familiar.
The Automatic Detective by A. Lee Martinez
How often do you have the opportunity to read robot noir fiction? Check out A. Lee Martinez’s robot detective Mack Megatron.
It’s hard out there for a bot in futuristic Empire City, and Megatron is just trying to prove himself as a decent robot so he can gain citizenship. That’s until he begins investigating a missing biological (humans) case, and everything gets complicated from there.
Including lots of fun references to detective fiction as well as science fiction tropes, The Automatic Detective will appeal to fans of Ready Player One who enjoy world-building and government conspiracies.
Dark Matter by Blake Crouch
This novel is more about alternate timelines than it is about futuristic worlds; however, I still regularly recommend it to people who love Ready Player One because I would argue both sci-fi novels deal with navigating alternate worlds, whether they are virtual or horrifyingly real.
In Dark Matter, protagonist Jason Dessen is kidnapped and thrown into a world that closely resembles his own, except in this world an alternate version of himself has created a box that allows people to travel the multiverse.
This novel will have you questioning what your own life would be like if you had made different choices.
In Real Life by Cory Doctorow/Jen Wang
This is one I read to fulfill the “Comic Written or Illustrated by a Person of Color” challenge, and as I was reading it, it struck me that this is a book that would appeal to Ready Player One fan.
It’s all about a girl named Anda who spends most of her free time in Coarsegold Online, a massively multiplayer online role-playing game. Like many of the characters in Ready Player One,
Anda sees her avatar as an opportunity to seek out adventure and live out fantasies that seem impossible in real life.
The Lives of Tao by Wesley Chu
This is yet another book that is the first in a trilogy. Sci-fi novel writers just love their trilogies. Roen is an out-of-shape IT guy who, unlike protagonists in other sci-fi novels, doesn’t escape his world through an alternate or virtual reality.
Rather, an alien named Tao escapes the uninhabitable Earth by implanting it in Roen’s brain. But can Tao whip Roen into shape in time to defeat his alien enemies? This is for fans of Ready Player One who love a good nerd-turned-hero story arc.
My Best Friend’s Exorcism by Grady Hendrix
Admittedly, I am obsessed with this novel and will look for any opportunity to recommend it to people. In fact, I’m pretty surprised this is the first time My Best Friend’s Exorcism has shown up on one of my Book Riot posts.
Yes, this is horror and not sci-fi, but hear me out. If ’80s pop culture references are your jam (and if you love Ready Player One, they probably are), this book is for you.
Each chapter is named after a popular ’80s song, the protagonist is obsessed with E.T., and a demon is fought off by calling upon the power of…Phil Collins?
This book is a crazy ride that, while it has echoes of classic Stephen King and ’80s teen movies like Heathers, is totally unique and unlike anything else you’ve experienced. Even if you don’t normally like horror, give this one a try.
The Running Man by Stephen King
Oh hey! Speaking of Stephen King, check out this novel, originally written under the pen name Richard Bachman.
There is a Stephen King novel out there for everyone, and The Running Man is the perfect Stephen King novel for fans of Ready Player One.
This novel is set in a dystopian future in which poor people are treated more like pawns than human beings.
After his daughter becomes ill, protagonist Ben Richards enlists himself in a reality-style game show in order to earn money to pay for his daughter’s medical bills.
Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Life by Bryan Lee O’Malley
This is the first in a series of comic books, but really if you’re a Ready Player One fan, you should just read the whole series. Scott Pilgrim is a 23-year-old Canadian guy who plays in a band and dates a high school girl.
Everything in his life is pretty okay until he meets a rollerblading delivery girl named Ramona Flowers. Now he must face all seven of Ramona’s ex-boyfriends in battle before he can win this awesome girl’s heart.
The comics are filled with pop culture references, and Ready Player One fan will especially appreciate all of the video game references.
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
Is it cheating to have two Cory Doctorow books on this list? These two authors just seem to be on similar wavelengths.
In Little Brother, our protagonist is a seventeen-year-old named Marcus (or call him by his online moniker “w1n5ton”) who, along with his friends, finds himself caught in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on San Francisco.
The city soon becomes a police state where every citizen is treated like a suspected terrorist, and it’s up to Marcus to take down the totalitarian government.
Like Ready Player One, this is a sci-fi novel that walks the line between young adult and adult literature, putting a young protagonist in highly adult situations.
Agent to the Stars by John Scalzi
Here’s another novel that’s a fun mixture of pop culture and sci-fi that should appeal to Ready Player One fan.
What do you do when you’re an alien species that’s come to earth to make contact with humans, but you’re having trouble closing the deal because you smell like rotting fish?
You hire Thomas Stein, one of Hollywood’s hottest agents, of course. If you’re into science fiction that also has a touch of comedy thrown in, this is one you will enjoy.
Feed by M.T. Anderson
Think about how much easier it would have been for Wade to plug into the Oasis if it had been implanted into his brain. This is a reality in the world of M.T. Anderson’s Feed where people connect to the Internet via feeds in their brains.
So what happens when a hacker causes a group of teenage kids’ feeds to malfunction? And will our protagonist Titus get the girl (Violet)? Read to find out.
32 Candles by Ernessa T. Carter
Here’s another pick for those who love ’80s nostalgia, especially ’80s movies. Much like Wade’s life is directly affected by ’80s movies such as Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Davie Jones’s life is changed forever after she sees the iconic ’80s teen movie Sixteen Candles.
After a cruel school prank goes too far, Davie bids her humdrum Mississippi life farewell and runs off to Hollywood in pursuit of her own “Molly Ringwald Happy Ending.” This novel is perfect for fans of Ready Player One who lit up every time a John Hughes film was referenced.
Otherworld by Jason Segel/Kirsten Miller
Yes, this novel is co-written by the actor Jason Segel of How I Met Your Mother and Muppets fame. And yes, this is another sci-fi novel about a game.
Otherworld is a completely immersive virtual reality where you not only see and hear, but you taste, smell, and feel the virtual world. Otherworld is a virtual reality game that is so much more than a game, so addictive that you might never want it to end, and for some, it might not.
All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai
This is a novel I’m recommending for reasons similar to the reasons I recommended Dark Matter. This is a novel all about alternate timelines rather than virtual worlds, but I feel like both of those concepts are still in the same ballpark.
In All Our Wrong Todays, we first enter a present world that looks a lot like films like Back to the Future and imagined what the world would be like by now. 2016 is a high-tech Utopian paradise, but it’s missing the one thing protagonist Tom most wants the love of his life.
So Tom does what any heartsick person in 2016 would do. He hops into a time machine to try to win back the girl. Yet what he finds is that the changes he makes in the past bring him back to a horrifying new present, a present that looks a lot like the world we readers live in today.
Ghosts of Arcadia by Ramsey Isler
A.R.C.A.D.I.A. is a platform that offers a complete simulated reality by tapping into direct brain scans to intuit what its users want to do next and give them a complete sensory experience.
But when such an intrusive system is hacked, a lot can and will go wrong.
The story of this virtual game is taken on by Miguel Naciamento, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and hedonist, in order to find the hackers, and he “becomes entrenched in a mystery that involves an androgynous hacker, a veteran government specialist on cyber-warfare, and even the creator of A.R.C.A.D.I.A.”c
The Three-Body Problem Cixin Liu
If you’re taking part in Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge, this novel is a chance to read a genre book in translation.
Liu’s novel explores Chinese culture and politics as well as the classic science-fiction premise of alien contact with Earth.
Although this book appears to be more serious than many of the others on this list, I believe Ready Player One fans will enjoy it because of its connection to computer games and interest in conspiracies.
Furthermore, it received the Hugo Award in 2015, and Barack Obama mentioned it as one of his personal favorites.
8-Bit Christmas by Kevin Jakubowski
What about video games? Check. Nostalgia? Check. “It’s the 1980s, and all Jake Doyle, nine, wants for Christmas is a Nintendo Entertainment System.” This novel has been compared to the classic Christmas film A Christmas Story from the 1980s, but with more video games.
Fans of Ready Player One should definitely check it out.
Armada by Ernest Cline
I thought I’d end this list with the most obvious suggestion in case you hadn’t already considered it. If you enjoyed Ready Player One, you should read Cline’s latest novel, Armada. Armada, like its predecessor, pays homage to video games and 1980s pop culture, with a focus on science fiction.
The general consensus appears to be that this one is not nearly as good as Ready Player One, but if you’re looking for more of the same from the same author, this book is still quite enjoyable.
In conclusion, with no set release date for the Ready Player One sequel novel, these books should help you get through your RP1 dry spell after you’ve exhausted the original and the film. Please leave any additional recommendations for books similar to Ready Player One in the comments!