Here is why the audio version of this petty, millennia-spanning rivalry is a must-listen for any fan of the 41st Millennium. The Plot: A 10,000-Year Grudge Match
The two compete over a powerful Necrontyr artifact, a chase that lasts ten thousand years. They ruin civilizations, accidentally start religions, and sabotage one another with the pettiness of two elderly neighbors fighting over a fence line. Why the Audiobook is the Gold Standard infinite and the divine audiobook exclusive
A master Astromancer who can see the future and manipulate time, but can’t seem to get Trazyn out of his hair. Here is why the audio version of this
Richard Reed provides distinct, evocative voices for Trazyn and Orikan. Trazyn sounds like a sophisticated, slightly bored curator, while Orikan’s voice drips with the haughty arrogance of a man who knows exactly how you’re going to die. Hearing their bickering aloud highlights the comedic timing that can sometimes be lost when reading silently. 2. Soundscapes of the 41st Millennium Why the Audiobook is the Gold Standard A
Black Library’s production value is top-tier. The "audiobook exclusive" feel comes from the subtle use of voice modulation. The Necrons don't just sound like humans; there is a mechanical resonance to their speech that reminds you they are soulless machines, even when they are arguing about a theater performance they attended three centuries ago. 3. Immersion in Scale
The tragedy of the Biotransference and what the Necrons lost to become immortal.
At its core, The Infinite and the Divine is a "buddy comedy" where the buddies happen to be immortal, metallic aliens who hate each other. The story follows: