D.M. Rhodes - 'Razzmatazz'

Light Novel Author

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What Is Dungeon Core?

Every fantasy reader knows the setup: a dark labyrinth crawling with traps, monsters, and buried treasure, just waiting for some hero to come plunder it. Dungeon core flips that on its head. What if you were the dungeon?

 

In a dungeon core novel, the main character usually dies and comes back as the dungeon's heart itself, a gemstone, a crystal, some kind of "core" buried deep underground. From that point on, they're the one building things. Digging tunnels, spawning monsters, laying traps, growing the place room by room, all while adventurers keep showing up to try to kill them and steal whatever they've built. It's part base builder, part survival story, part management sim, just told as a novel instead of a game. If you've ever spent way too long perfecting a killbox layout in a strategy game, this genre is basically written for you.

 

Cover of Final Core, Volume 1 — a dungeon core LitRPG novel by D.M. Rhodes
Final Core, the holy tower dungeon meant to bring about the end of the era

 

Why it works so well

Dungeon core is the ultimate underdog story. Your protagonist literally starts out as a rock. Everything after that, every floor, every creature, every clever bit of defense, gets earned right in front of the reader. That's part of why the subgenre fits so naturally inside LitRPG: the mana costs, the monster evolution trees, the system tables tracking every upgrade all turn world building itself into the plot.

 

It also quietly flips fantasy morality around. The "monster" is the hero here. The brave adventurers kicking down your front door are the invaders. Some of the best stories in this genre live entirely in that tension, and some of the funniest ones too.

 

My dungeon core books

I'll just be honest about it: dungeon core is my home turf. It's the subgenre I keep coming back to, and every one of these lives in my shared Blackwater World:

 

Cover of Vampire Core, Volume 1 — a dungeon core novel by D.M. Rhodes
Vampire Core, reborn as the hot, evil vampire lord, castle and all

 

Where dungeon core sits in the genre map

Dungeon core is close cousins with isekai since most cores were ordinary people from our world before they ended up buried underground, and it shares that same growth obsessed heart with progression fantasy. If you like protagonists who aren't even human and are constantly upgrading, you'll probably also like evolution novels, where the hero levels up by changing species instead of adding new floors.

 

New to all this? Start with the general LitRPG guide, then come back and pick a core. I'd say start with Demon Core, but I'm obviously not an unbiased source here.

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