This is an old article but it explains Foundryside better than I could. It's a fairly standard fantasy setting with its own unique form of magic, and yet the story includes multiple cyberpunk tropes.

The article was written before the rest of the trilogy was released. I've read the trilogy and unfortunately, I'd only consider the first book to be cyberpunk. The series goes pretty far off the deep end to the point that the third book is about (I'm trying to use spoiler tags here):

spoiler

two hive-minds battling for control of humanity. All the protagonists are part of one hive-mind and are trying to stop the evil hive-mind. The two hive-minds aren't even present in book 2 so this was a pretty drastic departure from the rest of the series.

  • LibsEatPoop [any]
    ·
    4 months ago

    That's super cool! Are the rest of the books still worth reading in your opinion? Failing that, does the first book have a good enough ending that I can stop there?

    • Hammerjack@lemmy.zip
      hexagon
      M
      ·
      4 months ago

      I thought the first book was phenomenal and couldn't wait to read the sequels. The second one went more into fantasy than cyberpunk (totally understandable) but I still enjoyed it. The third book though, it was just so out there that I didn't really enjoy it anymore. I wouldn't say the third book was bad, it just went in a direction I didn't care for. It felt like too far of a departure from the rules established in the first two books (as far as the magic system is concerned).