I think the general dislike is related to the source material. The idea then got adapted by a big name producer, but he most likely left out literally huge chunks of absolute crap. Like, the author has the character's internal voice talking for pages and pages about how much he knows about 80s TV shows and stuff. Really, the main character is compete mary sue author's self insert who's a huge 80s TV nerd and in the book, it's in the future where suddenly being an 80s TV nerd is the key to becoming the most powerful man on Earth or some shit. Specifically it's a story about the author Ernest Cline becoming the most powerful man on Earth because knowing the specific trivia known by Ernest Cline has against all reason become the most valuable thing on Earth. It's not really a love letter to those geeky things, it's a power fantasy about a very specific trivia nerd becoming godlike because suddenly everyone values the exact specific trivia he's into.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9969571-ready-player-oneI should preface the rest of this review by stating that I am, and have always been, a geek at heart. I am as much a byproduct of the 1980s as anyone. I've been a lifelong gamer, a pop culture obsessive, and I once thought I'd married, for real, Princess Peach.
Ready Player One has been hailed by its author, Ernest Cline, as a love letter to anyone who "grew up geek," a sentiment that has been confirmed by every review, in every publication, all over the world. And yet, the Ready Player One that I read was less a love letter to geeks than it was a pat on the back to an 18-year-old Cline, a Stephanie-Meyer-eclipsing Mary Sue that attempts to justify the behavior of an overweight, socially awkward, virginal nerd.
I'm not being mean. It's literally what it is.
One term has appeared more than once in different reviews of the book I've read, and that's "name dropping". It's not so much
references he just literally spends page after page listing shit and you're meant to go "omg i've heard of that shit".
https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/14863741-ready-player-one?page=9“I watched every episode of The Greatest American Hero, Airwolf, The A-Team, Knight Rider, Misfits of Science, and The Muppet Show.”
Is literally a quote from this piece of shit book, and it's apparently embedded in an author's voice monologue that goes on for like 6 pages just listing shit he knows about. Mentioning the name of things isn't really a "reference". He just spends page after page listing titles of things to show he knows more about them than you do; that's not paying respect to any of those individual series.
I have no time for this series, couldn't be bothered with it.
“The collected knowledge, art, and amusements of all human civilization were there, waiting for me. But gaining access to all of that information turned out to be something of a mixed blessing. Because that was when I found out the truth.”
Oh right, but he spends all his time watching The A Team, and the engineer of modern society was also somehow obsessed with shit like The A Team too.