The Bladeborn Saga Books in Order
Part ofTC Edge Books in OrderSee The Bladeborn Saga books in order by TC Edge, with short summaries, series background, and simple guidance on where to begin this epic fantasy world.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
The Song of the First Blade
by TC Edge
2020
As war closes in on Vandar, Elyon, Saska, and other scattered players are pulled toward the choosing of a new First Blade. Old gods, buried power, and broken alliances set a huge conflict in motion.
An Echo of Titans
by TC Edge
2021
A royal wedding, simmering unrest, and ancient tombs drag Elyon, Saska, and Jonik deeper into a continent-wide struggle. The book widens the mythic side of the series as old powers begin to stir.
Ghost of the Shadowfort
by TC Edge
2021
Elyon marches into a northern war full of mutiny and treachery, while Saska infiltrates an enemy camp and Jonik is hunted by his old order. The world grows wider, darker, and far less stable.
The Winds of War
by TC Edge
2022
The fragile peace finally gives way as armies move, loyalties crack, and the fight for the next Renewal turns into open war. Elyon and his allies are pushed toward harder choices and bigger battles.
Series background & context
The Bladeborn Saga is TC Edge's big, multi-POV epic fantasy series. It starts in The Song of the First Blade with several story lines that look separate at first, but quickly begin pulling toward the same storm. Elyon Daecar is a gifted young Bladeborn tied to the politics of Vandar. Saska is a servant girl on the run with a past she does not yet understand. Jonik is a hunted man with old loyalties, older wounds, and a connection to darker parts of the world. Around them, kings scheme, orders fracture, and ancient powers start to wake.
The setting matters a lot here. This is not a small quest story tucked into one corner of a map. The books move across kingdoms, war camps, fortresses, ports, ruins, and religious strongholds, and each place puts its own pressure on the characters. The north and south feel distinct. Old grudges matter. So do bloodlines, prophecy, and the strange gifts left behind by the fallen gods.
That fallen-gods piece is one of the series' main hooks.
The magic and myth are woven into politics and war rather than sitting off to one side. The title of First Blade is not just ceremonial. It sits inside a larger struggle over power, legitimacy, and who gets to shape the next age. As the books move on, the scale grows from personal survival and court intrigue into something closer to continental crisis, with dragons, ancient evils, and the threat of renewal turning from rumor into immediate danger.
Even with the big scope, the series stays character led. Elyon, Saska, Jonik, and the wider cast are all forced to keep making choices before they fully understand the board they are standing on. Some are trying to protect family. Some are trying to outrun the past. Some are trying to live with what they have already done. That gives the story a steady emotional center, even when the map keeps opening wider.
The tone is classic epic fantasy, but not slow or distant. There is a lot of war, betrayal, travel, and shifting allegiance, yet the books still like clean narrative momentum. If you enjoy stories where prophecy, gods, and political collapse all matter at once, this series leans hard in that direction.
Read it for the scale, but stay for the way the pieces lock together.
Edited by
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