Hero, Vol. 1

Hero, Book 1 is the first book of the "Hero" series.

Summary
''Take to the skies! Make friends, find love, and save your city in this action-packed adventure!''

Chapter 1: The First Day of the Rest of Your Life
"Take to the skies! Make friends, find love, and save your city in this action-packed adventure!" The story opens with Your Character flying through the devastated city of Northbridge, confronting a mysterious figure engulfed by energy.

The story flashes back to 6 months earlier, where it is revealed the young man/woman is the executive assistant to Grayson Prescott at Prescott Industries. After fixing a catering error with Marjorie Miles and checking in with engineer Dax and security guard Santiago, your character convinces Grayson to allow your best friend Poppy Patel, a junior editor at a fashion magazine called Motif, to attend a gala at Prescott Industries that night.

Billionaire Silas Prescott reveals a device called The Prism Gate, which will provide clean and inexhaustible energy, putting an end to pollution, famine, and inequality.

The event is then interrupted by a group of four heavily armed criminals, most likely behind a series of Jewelry heists mentioned by Santiago earlier in the chapter, intending to commit a robbery.

Chapter 2: Uninvited Guests
"Armed robbers are holding the gala hostage! Can you save the day?" You, Dax and Poppy discover that you have super-strength and the ability to fly. Meanwhile, the leader of the attack suffers with the mysterious crystal's effects.

Chapter 3: Back to Formula
"A few days after the Prism Gate incident, life in Northbridge goes back to normal... for everyone but you, that is!"

Trivia

 * The drawing style of this book is similar to that of "Endless Summer" in which it uses its own comic book-esque style rather than the style used in majority of the other books.
 * In the book's cover art, it's written "Vol. 1" instead of "Book 1".
 * Pixelberry introduced a new genre, Superheroes, with this story.
 * Some of the characters having alliterative names is similar to how famous comic-book writer Stan Lee names some of his characters.