Quinn Norton is starting over at a new high school and hopes that joining a D&D game will be the trick to making friends. The plan sounds even better when she’s invited into a group that includes Logan Weber, the cute and charming guy she met on her first day of class. But this isn’t your average D&D campaign— this group livestreams their games and enforces strict rules: no phones allowed, and no dating other group members.

Quinn is willing to accept the rules, even if it makes Logan off-limits. And she quickly learns that doing so won’t be a problem, since Logan goes from charismatic to insufferable as soon as she agrees to join. As their bickering—and bantering—intensifies inside and outside the game, Quinn can’t help wondering: Is Logan’s infuriating behavior a smokescreen for hidden feelings? Quinn is risking it all, and the twenty-sided dice are rolling!

A super sweet romance that's a lovely sequel to Dungeons and Drama. While I was much more invested in the first book, this one managed to make me smile a lot as well!

I absolutely adore how Kristy Boyce writes friendships and how they are an important part of her romance novels. It makes far more sense for a character to have lots of different connections with lots of different people instead of just focusing on one, singular romantic relationship. 

Of course, my favorite character was Grandma because that woman is such a badass ❤ I even appreciated the sibling subplot because Quinn's relationship with her brother was one of the more realistic ones. I was so annoyed by him at first (as an older sister, this is my right lol), and then I realized, it's because we were looking at him through Quinn's eyes, and after she finds out some things about him, she (along with us, the reader) changes her view of him. 

Basically, the whole book is filled with people having healthy relationships - with parents, siblings, friends, grandparents, boyfriends/girlfriends etc 😄 It took me a while to start liking the main couple because they had a rough start, but in the end, they were pretty sweet. I was also pleasantly surprised by their mature choices and how they handled the whole "D&D no dating rule."