Man, that series is basically a masterclass in turning insecurity into a strength. The main character's arc is all about internalizing that their supposed weaknesses—being smaller, less magically gifted, whatever—are actually unique advantages. The growth feels earned because the failures are so vivid; you really feel the sting when they mess up a spell or let the team down. It’s not just about leveling up skills, but about changing how they see themselves. By the end, they’re not just stronger, they’re wiser, making decisions for the group’s benefit, not just to prove a point. Solid stuff.
I don’t know which 'dungeon academy' series you mean exactly because there are a few, but I'm guessing the popular one where the setting is a magical school for monsters or adventurers. If that's the one, the character growth is pretty systematic, almost like a video game skill tree. The main kid, usually an outcast like a kobold or goblin in a school for 'proper' monsters, starts with zero confidence and a ton of self-doubt. The progression isn't subtle—they fail a test, get bullied, then have a small win by using a unique trait everyone mocked. The real development comes from how the series frames friendship. It's never about the protagonist becoming the most powerful; it's about learning to delegate, trust the brainy goblin with the plan, and let the fierce harpy take the frontline. Their growth is tied to understanding their own niche instead of forcing themselves into a traditional hero mold. By the third book, you see them making strategic choices they'd have panicked over earlier, and the group dynamic shifts from a bunch of misfits to a real team with roles. It's predictable in a cozy way, scratch that tactical fantasy itch of seeing underpowered characters win through cleverness rather than brute force.
What I find less convincing is the handling of the rival characters. They often stay static, just one-dimensional bullies until maybe a last-minute redemption that feels unearned. The protagonist's growth sometimes comes at the expense of the world feeling a bit too accommodating—like the universe bends to reward their specific brand of unconventional thinking every single time. Still, for a middle-grade or YA series, it delivers exactly what it promises: a slow, steady climb from insecurity to competent leadership, with enough magical mishaps and exam crises to keep the school setting fun.
2026-07-13 19:34:10
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Moon Called : Werewolf Academy (Book 1)
Erika Lana Bell
8
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On my sixteenth birthday, everything changes. One moment I'm your below-average girl—the next moment, I’m a monster.
A werewolf.
As a danger to society, and with my parents' refusal to help me, I have no other choice but to go to the werewolf place. Nothing prepares me for what waits for me inside the Academy of the Moon.
Not only do I learn that the horrid tales I’d been told about werewolves were not true—but that I am different from the others. This results in my being a scapegoat for condemnation.
What’s even worse is that the boy who marked me might be a murderer. He’s on the loose. Will he come back for me? Am I turning into an evil beast, like him?
And then, there’s Elijah Ledger. The future alpha—a gorgeous werewolf who appears to be bearing dark secrets from everyone. I’m drawn to him. But he’s a magnet for misfortune, and his secrets start to unveil themselves.
While I’m dealing with an array of problems, including a jealous girl who can’t stand my newfound attention from Elijah—one by one, students are getting attacked at the academy. The big question is: who is it? And why are they doing it?
Things get ugly—and I am caught in the middle of it.
Strength is everything in our world. I was born without it. My name is Maeve Nightwhisper—the royal family’s shame. I can’t shift. I don’t heal like a true Alpha. I was never meant to rule. That future belonged to my twin brother, Reeve. Until he was poisoned the night before enrolling at Lycan Spirit Academy. If the academy discovers the heir is dead, our uncle Garson claims the throne by dawn. So I bury my brother and become him. I cut my hair, bind my chest, suppress my scent, and enter the all-male academy under Reeve’s name. One injury that heals too slowly, one slip in the communal showers, one crack in my control, and I’m exposed. The academy is a battlefield disguised as a school. Ranking matches are merciless. Alphas dominate or get crushed. I can’t overpower them, so I awaken the Forbidden Arts—an outlawed technique once practiced only by women of my bloodline. They call me weak. Until I start winning. Now Alaric, the Academy’s Sword Bearer, watches me like prey. Dorian, the potions prodigy, looks at me like a secret he’s desperate to uncover. Then the Mate Bond snaps. If they discover I’m Maeve... The throne won’t be the only thing I lose.
"You'll fit in just right, Kelani. The kids here are as special as you are."
"No, they are different."
"You don't know how special you are at the moment, but you will soon enough, and thus, the school survived this long because of your birth."
At only nine years old, Kelani killed her father, was cast into the dark, dirty basement by her stepmother, and was left to repent for all her transgressions by everyone in her household. Kelani endured bullying and scorn, and just when she thought it might not end, she received an invitation to Mystic Academy, known as The Academy for Freaks.
Kelani believed all her problems would be solved when she arrived at the Academy, but that was just the beginning.
Love came in various forms for Kelani, and there were three she desired the most. However, she couldn't possibly be mated to three powerful werewolves who also had their eyes set on her, could she?
"This isn't just a school. It's something more."
Zeda Iverson thought high school was done, but her parents insisted on Shadowbrook Academy – a mysterious school she'd never heard of – instead of college.
She soon discovers Shadowbrook hides secrets, and the four powerful princes who rule the academy are all obsessed with her.
But their attention becomes the least of her worries as a dangerous revolution looms, threatening to destroy the academy and the princes Zeda has fallen in love with.
Only Zeda holds the power to stop the coming chaos. Yet, her abilities are locked away.
Can she unlock her potential and save everyone she loves before it's too late?
Have you ever felt a pain that consumed your entire being?
A pain that latched onto your heart and felt as if it shattered it into a million pieces?
A pain that you try to shove down deep, but in the end, you weep until your eyes run dry and there should be nothing left inside of you?
And yet, you somehow come out unscathed.
You're still alive to see another day, to sleep, to eat and to live.
And then comes a boy. One that shatters my soul, and makes me feel again.
Trapped in the walls of Windamere Academy, I know there's something wrong with this place, and yet here I am. One thing is for sure, everyone seems to bond over how much they all hate me.
When the apocalypse came, she lost everything. Starving, hunted, and desperate, she trusted the one man she loved… only for him to betray her in the cruelest way possible. He stole her last supplies to please another woman and left her to die in a sea of the undead.
But death wasn’t the end.
She woke up days before the world collapsed.
After cutting ties with her ungrateful ex and his parasitic family, a mysterious voice awakens in her mind, LUS, a Level-Up System designed to help her survive the coming end.
With knowledge of the future and a system guiding her every move, she begins to prepare. She stockpiles resources, builds a base, and learns how to fight back against the horrors that once destroyed her.
And when the apocalypse arrives again… she’s ready. But survival isn’t the only thing waiting for her in this new life.
A silent killer who watches her like prey.
A manipulative genius who wants to unravel her secrets.
A gentle protector who sees the girl she hides.
And a dangerous man who thrives in chaos.
As the world burns and power shifts, they’re all drawn to her, each with their own motives, each with their own darkness. Even her past refuses to stay buried.
Because now, the man who once abandoned her is back, broken, desperate, and begging for a second chance. Too bad she has no time for regrets.
Not when she’s busy rising to power… and building a kingdom in the ruins of the world.
Man, talking about twists in 'Dungeon Academy' is like asking if dungeons have monsters. The series is practically built on them! The first real gut-punch for me was finding out who Zell's real parents are. The whole setup makes you think it's going one way, this classic underdog story about the lone human in a monster school, and then it pulls the rug out completely. It recontextualizes his entire struggle and his connection to the dungeon itself.
And it's not just the big identity reveal. The true nature of the 'Academy' and what the Headmaster is actually preparing the students for is another massive shift. It moves from a sort of magical survival school romp into something with much higher, darker stakes. The twist with a certain trusted teacher's allegiance also really got me—I should have seen it coming, but I was too busy enjoying the monster-centric curriculum.
What I appreciate is that the twists aren't just for shock. They directly force Zell to question everything he's fighting for and who his real family is, the one he was born into or the one he found. The later books have some wild turns involving ancient pacts and the origins of dungeons that make the world feel much bigger and more precarious. It’s a series that really rewards you for paying attention to the lore snippets between all the humor and potion-making disasters.
The pacing of the reveals is solid, too. They never feel unearned, just expertly buried under layers of school rivalry and dungeon-crawling action. You get just enough hints to feel clever if you piece it together, but not so many that the surprise is ruined. It's that balance that makes rereads so fun, spotting all the little clues you missed the first time.
I grabbed the first 'Dungeon Academy' book on a whim during a digital sale, figuring it'd be a light read. Ended up binge-reading the whole series over a weekend. It’s not the kind of fantasy that reinvents the wheel, but there’s a charming, almost cozy energy to it that I found really refreshing. The premise of monsters going to school is fun, but what kept me hooked were the character dynamics—it’s got this found-family vibe among the students that develops nicely across the books.
Some folks might find the early books a bit predictable in their structure, following the academic-year rhythm with tournaments and hidden threats. I’ll admit I rolled my eyes a little at the 'chosen one' hints in book two. But the series finds its footing by focusing on the dungeon ecology and political intrigue between monster factions, which added a layer I didn’t expect. The pacing is brisk, never bogging down, which makes it an easy recommendation for someone wanting a fantasy series that doesn’t demand a huge emotional investment but still delivers solid fun and some genuinely clever twists on classic dungeon tropes by the end.