The Ultimate Guide to Epic Fantasy (why so many subgenres!?)

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  • Опубліковано 25 лип 2024
  • Here is your Ultimate Guide to Epic Fantasy!
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    0:00 - Intro
    0:42 -What is epic fantasy?
    1:13 - Traditional fantasy
    1:31 - Quest Fantasy
    2:16 - Magic School
    3:09 - Coming-of-Age
    4:25 - Grimdark
    5:05 - Dark Fantasy
    5:52 - Military Fantasy
    7:00 - Urban Fantasy
    7:57 - Portal Fantasy
    8:54 - Steampunk Fantasy
    10:30 - Mythological Fantasy
    11:23 - Fairytale retellings
    Music by Damien Sebe - Goodmorning, My Love - thmatc.co/?l=A052F6D6
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 80

  • @libraryofaviking
    @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for watching! Some of you are wondering why I put The Lord of the Rings in the 'coming-of-age category'. While LOTR is not a coming-of-age fantasy only, there is little doubt that Frodo, Sam, Merry and Pippin fit the bill!

  • @jttavares
    @jttavares 11 місяців тому +10

    I think your definition for Epic Fantasy is just the definition of Fantasy in general. Fantasy is about the setting of the story. If you remove the fantastical setting, you don't have a Fantasy story. I think the reason for the creation of so many subgenres is that Fantasy categorization isn't enough to tell you what you're going to find in the story. Unlike Romance or Criminal thrillers that tell you much more about what the book contains. This is a really interesting and philosophical topic. 😅

    • @celestegosling6054
      @celestegosling6054 11 місяців тому +2

      I agree with you. All of those sub-genres are of just Fantasy, not "Epic" Fantasy.

  • @knotslip8862
    @knotslip8862 11 місяців тому +16

    Good video, but for Grim Dark you left out the most famous and most influential one, which is A Song of Ice and Fire. Also, For steam punk, You have to list Perdido Street Station and the other China Mieville Bas-LAg books. But I enjoyed the video. Thanks!

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому

      I should definitely have included ASOIAF! Thank you for watching!

  • @asmrglow
    @asmrglow 10 місяців тому +4

    Hi Jóhan! I would love it if you could make the same thing for all fantasy in general, or other types than epic fantasies! It was so clear and so interesting

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  10 місяців тому +2

      Hiya!
      It is a great suggestion and I am glad you enjoyed the video. I definitely want to explore a bit more about doing guides to 'grimdark', 'urban' etc. This video is pretty close to 'Guide to fantasy' when it comes to the subgenres!
      If you need any beginner's recommendations then I always recommend Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson. I am happy to provide other recommendations!

  • @safinan8008
    @safinan8008 11 місяців тому

    Interesting video! Happy reading to you!! 😊

  • @dianeboudrias7954
    @dianeboudrias7954 11 місяців тому +1

    I really love the way you categorized these different types of fantasy books. 📚 I loved it so much that I posted it on Facebook 🤗

  • @pkdang6580
    @pkdang6580 11 місяців тому +2

    This was extremely helpful, thank you for this! Now I know what sub genre I like most 😊

  • @Canoe64
    @Canoe64 11 місяців тому +1

    Love the chart, thank you!
    Before discovering fantasy, I had no idea there were some many sub genres. There is something for all readers.
    I only started reading fantasy four years ago and looking at my bookshelf of favourites it seems I enjoy historical, epic and dark fantasy. But first, I have to enjoy the writing style, otherwise it's a no go for me. Kindle samples have been my best way of ensuring the writing style works for me before buying a book.

  • @kaustubhdudhane
    @kaustubhdudhane 11 місяців тому +2

    You were spot on when you mentioned that most of the books will fall in various categories like A Song of Ice & Fire, Stormlight Archives, Mistborn and even Faithful and the Fallen series.

  • @fantasticalreads
    @fantasticalreads 11 місяців тому

    Awesome breakdown and great recs! Thanks!

  • @MattGrimmett
    @MattGrimmett 11 місяців тому +3

    Always glad to hear someone ranks The Dark Tower series as high as I do. I wasn't fond of the 5th and 6th books but loved the earlier ones and the final installment. My hope is that King will revisit the world once more in some fashion before he truly retires. Another fave is "The Talisman" which is another they are making into a movie. Flanagan is going to prioritize Dark Tower as a series after the strike, FYI.

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому

      Yay! I honestly loved Song of Suzannah, which I know is not a popular opinion! I still need to read The Talisman!

  • @crazyforbooksandcoffee
    @crazyforbooksandcoffee 10 місяців тому

    A great breakdown 😊 i get so confused where books fit sometimes 😂 I need thia chart 😂

  • @luminyam6145
    @luminyam6145 11 місяців тому

    Excellent video, thank you.

  • @MatildaTheBookDragon
    @MatildaTheBookDragon 11 місяців тому +1

    A classic more grown up portal fantasy is The Fionavar Tapestry trilogy by Guy Gavriel Kay. I read them after Wheel of Time and its obvious Robert Jordan was inspired by this series! A really good Steampunk is Thiefs Magic series by Trudi Canavan. Its actually a mix of different genres...unique!!

  • @donnapa.207
    @donnapa.207 11 місяців тому +1

    Song of Achilles (audiobook for me) is in my top ten of all time and I'm pretty old. I listen to so many audiobooks that I maintain annual memberships to both Audible and Scribd. Just finished City of Brass which I really couldn't put away.

  • @AyushGupta-qs5xw
    @AyushGupta-qs5xw 11 місяців тому +3

    Im showing this to anyone who asks me "isnt it monotonous to just keep reading the same genre"

  • @greatestpodcastinthemultiverse
    @greatestpodcastinthemultiverse 11 місяців тому

    Love this breakdown!

  • @r.awilliams9815
    @r.awilliams9815 11 місяців тому +1

    I would add another category, historical fantasy, with Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle as an example.

  • @MistbornPrincess
    @MistbornPrincess 10 місяців тому

    Not fantasy but two great fairy tale retellings as Science Fiction are “Stitiching Snow” and “Spinning Starlight”. Love love love them.

  • @peterbrasier-lb2vd
    @peterbrasier-lb2vd 11 місяців тому +1

    I, having not created a lucid chart of epic fantasy, applaud. To entice people to read my favorite sub sub genre(yes fantasy goes that deep) is something called flintlock fantasy. What is flintlock fantasy it is what you get if you mashed lord of the rings with a John Wayne film(man I am in my late twenties and I don't even know if Gen z and Alpha know of John Wayne, Gunsmoke, or The Rifleman). To explain the best way is to think the fantasy is happening in American Civil War times (Napoleon War for non Americans) you deal with gunpowder, flintlock pistols, canons and Wizard's it is all delicious goodness (some crazy scenes where a literal God of the universe is shot in the face with a cannonball is both spin tingling and laughable at the sametime.)
    Some epic Flintlock Fantasy:
    Gunslinger(in the title)
    The powder mage trilogy
    Legacy by le modest (one of the greats in fantasy, seriously this dude has written in almost of the subgenres)
    On stranger tides(literal inspired pirates of the Caribbean)
    Peter Pan
    And my personal favorite the lightbringer series by Brent Weeks(the God scene is in this series, be wary of googling characters the community is very spoiled happy...)
    Any way enjoy
    P.s. did a quick Google and apparently Sabriel is classified flint lock.
    If you want legolas with a gun read the Iron Elf series (a darkness foraged in fire)

  • @Talking_Story
    @Talking_Story 11 місяців тому

    Great job breaking it all down!

  • @maxittome
    @maxittome 11 місяців тому

    The Last War by Mike Shackle has to be mentioned for the war / fantasy class with coming of age. Amazing trilogy well worth your time, you will love it

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому +1

      It is on my tbr! I look forward to reading it!

  • @klutzkeebs
    @klutzkeebs 10 місяців тому

    Love this Vid!

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  10 місяців тому

      Thank you!

    • @klutzkeebs
      @klutzkeebs 10 місяців тому

      @@libraryofaviking I Can’t tell you how hard it’s been to find a good fantasy booktuber that’s also a Christian and doesn’t hate on underlying themes in chronicles of narnia and lotr

  • @gregoryamato8693
    @gregoryamato8693 10 місяців тому +1

    I think some people have already pointed out that the "epic fantasy" label here is more like "fantasy."
    I would be interested to know how you define epic fantasy aaas distinct from other fantasy subgenres. And do you consider "epic fantasy" synonymous with "high fantasy" or different?

  • @Mmm-xi7fx
    @Mmm-xi7fx 11 місяців тому +2

    I literally said “sword and sorcery” before almost every category you named. I’m shocked it wasn’t a major category.

    • @ProudPlatypus
      @ProudPlatypus 11 місяців тому

      I think that got absorbed into grim dark.

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому +1

      It is probably the biggest subgenre that I decided not to include! It is worth a mention so I should have included it!

  • @Zivilin
    @Zivilin 11 місяців тому +1

    I'm shocked you didn't mention Warhammer 40k for the grim dark fantasy.

  • @flowerpixel
    @flowerpixel 11 місяців тому

    What subgenre is six of crows duology? Its one of my favorites

  • @jenniferclark677
    @jenniferclark677 11 місяців тому

    Spinning Silver is so good!

  • @wolfborn3973
    @wolfborn3973 11 місяців тому

    I need to read some Steampunk. Haven't read any yet but I love it in movies and games so I'd probably love it in books as well, haven't really considered it until now, thanks!

    • @Mmm-xi7fx
      @Mmm-xi7fx 11 місяців тому

      ‘Emperor’s edge’ by Lindsey Barouker is a good one.

    • @Zivilin
      @Zivilin 11 місяців тому

      The Strange Affair of Spring-Heeled Jack by Mark Hodder

  • @Jigen23
    @Jigen23 11 місяців тому +1

    Great video! However, I'm a little confused why LotR is in the coming-of-age sub-genre. Doesn't seem to fit here. Keep up the great work though.

  • @rizwanshar6171
    @rizwanshar6171 3 місяці тому

    For Military fantasy Powder Mage Trilogy is great, and for steampunk The Dandelion dynasty is best

  • @Steve_Stowers
    @Steve_Stowers 11 місяців тому +15

    Overall pretty good, but I really don't understand why you categorized LOTR as "coming-of-age fantasy."

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому +6

      Obviously, LOTR is not only a coming-of-age fantasy, but Frodo, Sam, Merry and Pippin have some of the greatest coming-of-age arcs in fantasy!

    • @nathanhewett2283
      @nathanhewett2283 10 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@libraryofavikingI thought Frodo was like 50 when he left the shire. Even for hobbits I’m pretty sure 50 is fully grown.

    • @DivertingTales
      @DivertingTales 10 місяців тому +4

      @@nathanhewett2283 Maturity isn’t related to age. Coming of age stories aren’t necessarily connected with aging but with maturing. The Hobbits are “adults” in age but not mature. They are all adolescents psychologically speaking and are at the end of their journey adults who have faced the harsh realities of their world and grown/broken from it.

  • @danielgwynne7266
    @danielgwynne7266 11 місяців тому +3

    Malazan varies a lot between the books to the point book 5 has almost no military stuff and I would say the series as a whole is more just dark fantasy

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому

      Interesting! I haven't read that far so I couldn't say, but Deadhouse Gates is definitely military fantasy!

    • @danielgwynne7266
      @danielgwynne7266 11 місяців тому

      @@libraryofaviking book 5 is pretty much a comedic tragedy with some fantasy stuff and it’s very self contained

    • @danielgwynne7266
      @danielgwynne7266 11 місяців тому

      @@libraryofaviking even dg which is the most military fantasy of any books still only has 1/3 of it focused on that, the mappo , fiddler and felisin storylines are I think more important for the series as a whole too even if you don’t really understand the consequences and some of the scenes when first reading it

  • @Henry-jp3mc
    @Henry-jp3mc 11 місяців тому

    The Gates of The World by K.M Mckinnley is excellent steam punk.

  • @OmnivorousReader
    @OmnivorousReader 11 місяців тому

    Good breakdown; there are just so many genera's and subgenera's. We have come a long way from 'swords and sorcery' being the only one.
    I noticed that several people do not really see the coming of age in Tolkien; Consider, in The Hobbit the point is repeatedly made that he was quite young when he went on the quest to the Lonely Mountain and that he came back a very different Hobbit from the one who went away.
    Frodo and Sam and Pippin and Merry? %100 coming of age, they were all barely legal adults in Hobbit society when they left and they all matured significantly, for better or for worse, by the time they came back. And in the case of Merry and Pippin a LOT larger, thanks to the Ent droughts.

    • @andrepazzetti5246
      @andrepazzetti5246 11 місяців тому +1

      I can maybe see the argument for Pippin, But Both Frodo, Bilbo, Merry and Sam are well past the age of adulthood in the books(Both Frodo and Bilbo are 50 when they depart the Shire for the first time, Sam is 38, Merry is 36), with the books clearly stating that a Hobbit is considered an adult by the age of 33.
      I am of the opinion that just because a character grows and changes through the story, it doesn't make it coming-of-age. Besides, even if you consider that it has coming of age elements, The quest elements are much more intrinsic to the narrative, with the mission to destroy the ring(or to restore the Lonely Mountain) being much more front-and-center.

    • @OmnivorousReader
      @OmnivorousReader 11 місяців тому

      @@andrepazzetti5246 Yup, I agree that it is a quest, but the two are not mutually exclusive. I would interpret Frodo's journey starting with the birthday party, because that is when he receives the Ring.
      Bilbo is described in the first parts of The Hobbit in such a way as to sound very young.
      I grant you Sam is a stretch, because he does not change much throughout. However the 'young Hobbits' as they are often referred to; Merry, and Pippin, both become battle leaders when they get back, and both get a lot of recognition from the Shire-folk, so I would call that coming of age.
      Now, I have never spent much time overthinking the subgenera, but does someone have to be biologically young for it to be a coming of age story? There are plenty of stories where a character, while not a child, is not considered mature until they have come back from a journey. And 'maturity' varies so dramatically from society to society and individual to individual in any case. In AU for example, in some states and territories you can start driving at 16, drinking at 18. Still young enough for a coming of age quest, I would suggest.

  • @maxittome
    @maxittome 11 місяців тому

    And the Will of The Many is amazing and this is coming from someone who didn’t like and didn’t finish the Shadow of What Was Lost

  • @caewing85
    @caewing85 11 місяців тому

    I’m about to start Spinning Silver with my book club

    • @libraryofaviking
      @libraryofaviking  11 місяців тому

      My wife is also about to start it! I hope you will enjoy it!

  • @tlash544
    @tlash544 11 місяців тому

    No sword and sorcery?

  • @Readera
    @Readera 10 місяців тому

    I really enjoyed the video but I found your comments about portal fantasy becoming less popular funny. It may be true in books but it's become very popular in recent years in anime under the genre Isekai. If you are looking for portal stories and don't mind switching formats I would highly recommend checking Isekai anime or manga out.

  • @nazimelmardi
    @nazimelmardi 11 місяців тому

    Pretty cool explanation. But Harry Potter is urban fantasy and ya. But for sure not a new world. Unless we never think UK is a new world. Malazan is not grimm dark by the definition of Steven Erikson himself too. Also worth mentioning that Lord of the Rings itself is mythological by default. And quest too. It is the father of all quests including WoT.

  • @General_reader
    @General_reader 11 місяців тому

    I’ve never considered, lord of the rings as a coming of age story.

  • @-Nicoreon-
    @-Nicoreon- 11 місяців тому +1

    What do you mean portal fantasy is "not that popular right now"? Seriously the LitRPG sub genre is propping that more than you probably think, "He Who Fights With Monster" is a good series in that if you want to get a taste of that branch of epic fantasy not tainted to much by manga.

  • @Djinn_Entonic
    @Djinn_Entonic 11 місяців тому

    Im like half way through The song of Achilles, its cute, I love the prose, and every happy moment they manage to steal for themselves is a bitter reminder of whats to come.
    I have my problems with some parts like making Achilles like only boys, but its a sweet queer romance with Im all down for

  • @shamaunjiwanmall1987
    @shamaunjiwanmall1987 11 місяців тому

    Why doesn't anyone talk about the Bone Street Rumba series by Daniel José Older???!!! It is a very good trilogy but for some reason, I have never seen anyone talk about it!

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 27 днів тому

    It does make sense that fantasy worlds where magic exists do not advance technologically. This video explains it for you: ua-cam.com/video/lq7U2CIO81E/v-deo.html

  • @TheSwedeMcCoy
    @TheSwedeMcCoy 11 місяців тому

    And yet still no mention of Feist or Kerr...

  • @death14x45
    @death14x45 11 місяців тому

    My Favourite THE WITCHER, where does it belong

  • @vinodvagadurgi414
    @vinodvagadurgi414 11 місяців тому

    I am reading stormight so far at book 2
    It’s really mediocre and overt

  • @iChefTheImpossible
    @iChefTheImpossible 11 місяців тому +1

    Personally I am sick of the coming of age stories. I don’t mind secondary characters taking that role in stories

  • @katy744
    @katy744 11 місяців тому +1

    Where is Harry Potter

  • @olgertmagilaj2551
    @olgertmagilaj2551 11 місяців тому +1

    nothing ULTIMATE about this video

  • @AgnosticTruth
    @AgnosticTruth 11 місяців тому

    No mention of the original genre which is Sword & Sorcery?! Which probably has some of the best authors in the genre! It’s all just fantasy. All the sub’s are pointless!

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 27 днів тому

    Your definition begs the question. Per your own definition, it is set in a secondary world AND tells an Epic story! Epic stories have high stakes (not like swords and sorcery/heroic fantasy, where the hero is out for themselves to gain wealth or fame); rather in Epic stories, the protagonist is trying to save the world!. Since you failed to honot the "epic story" portion of your definition, almost all fantasy would fall into the definition of fantasy set in a secondary world. That make your definition meaningless.