Your characters are strong. Your world is rich. So why does your plot feel like two separate stories?
Because you're not integrating your dual plots.
You can have compelling characters and immersive worldbuilding, but if your romance and your fantasy quest run on parallel tracks-if the relationship doesn't complicate the quest, if the external conflict doesn't create romantic obstacles-readers will feel like they're reading two books awkwardly shoved together.
Romantasy plotting is brutally hard. Romance readers expect a complete romantic arc. Fantasy readers expect epic quests and high-stakes conflicts. Romantasy readers expect both, fully developed and inseparable. The romance must create complications for the quest. The quest must create obstacles for the romance. The climax must resolve both simultaneously.
Most writers can't pull it off. Their romantic scenes feel like interruptions. Their stakes are unbalanced. Their climax resolves one storyline while the other gets rushed in an epilogue.
Prophecies and Passion teaches you to master dual plot structure. Align your romantic arc and fantasy arc so they build tension simultaneously. Use worldbuilding to create romantic obstacles. Balance pacing between intimate scenes and action. Choreograph climaxes where the final battle and the romantic resolution are inseparable.
Because two separate plots make a mediocre book. One integrated story makes readers obsessed.
Book 4 in the Write Romantasy Like a Badass series.