https://drive.google.com/file/d/16bZ63jts_CaM-Fst_prFDsUs6A6crXmV/view?usp=sharing
Hey, welcome. I'm genuinely glad you're here, because what I'm about to share with you completely changed the trajectory of my writing career — and I think it's going to do the same for you.
But before I hand you the tools, I want to tell you how I found them. Because I didn't stumble onto this stuff. I earned it. The hard way.
I wrote nine novels.
Nine.
And every single one of them failed. Not in a dramatic, crash-and-burn kind of way — in a slow, demoralizing, nobody's-reading-this kind of way. I was putting in the work. I was publishing. I genuinely loved the genre. But something wasn't clicking, and I couldn't figure out what.
After my ninth novel went nowhere, I sat down and made a decision. I wasn't going to write another word until I understood why the books that were selling were selling.
So I went to Amazon. I pulled up the most popular LitRPG novels of all time — the ones with the most ratings, the best retention between books, the ones that readers kept coming back to series after series. I grabbed the top fifty.
And then I dissected them. Like a frog in a biology class.

I read every single one. I took notes on every pattern I noticed. Every trope. Every structural choice. Every character beat. And here's what gave me chills:
Every single one of them — every one of the top fifty bestselling LitRPG novels — shared specific patterns. Not vague vibes. Not general genre conventions. Specific, repeatable, definable ingredients that showed up again and again across the most beloved books in the genre.
Forty-one of them, to be exact.
I took those forty-one ingredients, and I used them to write my tenth novel. The Legend of Kazro. An isekai LitRPG built from the ground up on those patterns.
The month it launched, it earned five thousand dollars.
And it's still earning. Every single month.

That's the difference between writing a book you love and writing a book the market loves. And the gap between those two things? It starts at the outline.
That's exactly what this course is. I'm going to give you two things.
First: the forty-one ingredients. Every pattern I found in those fifty bestsellers, organized and explained so you know exactly what to include in your story and why readers respond to it.