Dungeon Lord (The Wraith’s Haunt) by Hugo Huesca

by Hugo Huesca

About the Series

Ed Wright is transported to a fantasy world and bound to a dark dungeon core, gaining the Dungeon Lord class. In a world where Dungeon Lords are considered evil by default, Ed tries to use his villain-coded abilities for non-evil purposes — building defenses, recruiting monsters who choose to follow him, and resisting the corruption that the class pushes him toward. The tension between the class’s dark nature and Ed’s attempts to be decent drives the narrative.

The “villain class, heroic intentions” framing is the hook. Ed’s progression involves growing his dungeon (building rooms, spawning defenders, expanding territory) while also leveling personal combat abilities. The moral tension — can you wield evil tools without becoming evil? — gives the series more thematic weight than pure power progression. The dungeon-building mechanics are detailed and satisfying.

This works for readers who want dungeon building from the lord’s perspective with a protagonist who has moral complexity. The completed status is valuable in a subgenre full of abandoned or hiatus series. The five-book length keeps it focused. The tradeoff: the “I’m a villain class but actually good” premise requires suspension of disbelief about why the world is structured this way. The pacing slows in the middle books as dungeon expansion takes priority over external conflict. If you want pure dungeon optimization without moral framing, other series lean more into the mechanical fantasy.


Reading Order

  1. Dungeon Lord (2018)
  2. Dungeon Lord 2: Otherworldly Powers (2019)
  3. Dungeon Lord 3: Abominable Creatures (2019)
  4. Dungeon Lord 4: Ancient Traditions (2020)
  5. Dungeon Lord 5: Final Stand (2021)

If You Like This Series

  • Divine Dungeon by Dakota Krout — Dungeon progression from the core’s perspective; completed
  • Life Reset by Shemer Kuznits — Monster-race protagonist building from nothing; completed
  • Overlord (light novel) — Isekai villain-class protagonist in a different tone; Japanese, ongoing
  • Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman — Dungeon from the delver’s side; darker, funnier
  • The Land by Aleron Kong — Settlement building with stat-heavy LitRPG; hiatus

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