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Mass Effect: Revelation by Drew Karpyshyn Review: A Propulsive Prequel Built for Fans
Mass Effect: Revelation is a science fiction novel by Drew Karpyshyn — the lead writer of BioWare's Mass Effect series — published in 2007 by Del Rey Books as the first novel set in the Mass Effect universe and a direct prequel to the original video game. The audiobook edition, narrated by David Colacci and released by Tantor Audio in November 2008, runs 8 hours and 31 minutes unabridged. Critical reception acknowledged it as a solid if unspectacular entry: best appreciated by fans of the game who want richer context for the universe's lore, characters, and galactic politics.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Mass Effect fans who want canonical backstory on Anderson and Saren — and the political history of humanity's entry into galactic society — told by the man who built the universe itself.
Worth it if
You have at least a passing familiarity with BioWare's games and want an efficient, lore-rich prequel that carries genuine authorial authority from the series' own lead writer.
Skip if
You're a general science-fiction reader with no attachment to the franchise — the workmanlike prose, underdeveloped supporting cast, and lore-delivery function will feel thin without the game context to animate them.
What readers & critics say
The Wikipedia entry on the novel relays that Thunderbolt Games found the clean, efficient prose suited the story's directness but also restrained it "from truly elevating itself to great science-fiction," while SF Signal called it a "decent, if not spectacular" novel with "workmanlike" writing. The Intergalactic Librarian blog described it as offering a well-detailed universe, compelling characters, and a plot filled with intrigue and suspense, calling it a solid sci-fi adventure for fans and newcomers alike.
Sources: Wikipedia – Mass Effect: Revelation, Intergalactic LibrarianMass Effect: Revelation by Drew Karpyshyn is Trending
Updated Jul 14, 2026In This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Story Contains and How It's Structured
- Significance: An Author Who Shaped the Universe Writing Its First Chapter
- Strengths: Characterisation, Efficiency, and World-Building Density
- Limitations: Craft Ceiling and Uneven Execution
- Who This Audiobook Is For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Written by Drew Karpyshyn, the lead writer of the Mass Effect game series, lending canonical authority to the lore and world-building
- Praised by Windows Central's Brendan Lowry for strong characterisations of both David Anderson and Saren, key figures in the broader franchise
- Thunderbolt Games credited the efficient, momentum-driven prose with making the novel a compulsive read for fans of the universe
- Provides substantial background on humanity's integration into galactic society, satisfying for readers who want context beyond the games
- Unabridged audiobook narrated by David Colacci runs a brisk 8 hours and 31 minutes — an accessible listen for genre fans
What Doesn't
- SF Signal characterised the writing as 'workmanlike' and the supporting characters as underdeveloped, limiting the novel's appeal beyond committed franchise fans
- Thunderbolt Games noted that the clean, efficient style also restrains the book from reaching the heights of great science fiction
- SF Signal specifically criticised the omniscient narrator's use of exclamation marks as a tonal inconsistency in the prose

What the Story Contains and How It's Structured
Significance: An Author Who Shaped the Universe Writing Its First Chapter
Strengths: Characterisation, Efficiency, and World-Building Density
Limitations: Craft Ceiling and Uneven Execution
Who This Audiobook Is For
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
- 1
penguinrandomhouse.com
- 2
Open Library
- Further reading
- 3
Drew Karpyshyn, Wikipedia
- 4
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