Decent, 5/10. (Time of review: 3 chapters)
Tl;Dr: Middle of the road plot, extremely rushed. Good art. (As of now) Bland characters. Generic setting.
Plot:
The central focus is on our main character, who is a child that is apparently quite powerful. The central focus appears to be on how the child will be raised and all the wacky hijinks he will get up to. It's not a bad thing, just nothing we haven't seen before.
The story so far has made no effort to hook the audience, preferring to use the "tell, don't show" approach to storytelling. In the first chapter, instead of allowing us to learn his motivation organically, the protagonist just outright tells us his reason for living. Reading this story is like getting the Sparknotes version of an actually interesting plot. Anything that could grip the reader is over in 2-3 pages. Whoever storyboarded this clearly didn't care enough to do much more than to hit every plot point as fast as possible. It's simply far too rushed.
Characters:
The characters exist, that's for sure. I can't speak to their quality, as they feel more than a little flat in some cases. Perhaps it will get better, but that's not something that is guaranteed.
Our protagonist is a veritable Gary Stu, who can solve problems immediately upon encountering them. The other members of the party barely deviate at all from their archetypes, and any variation that is present is immediately highlighted, instead of letting the reader notice on their own.
Art:
The character and environment art is amazing, but everything looks a little stiff. It's only noticeable if you look very closely. Frankly, the art is wasted on this story.
Setting:
Fairly standard. Set in a mediaeval fantasy world. Not much else to say. If you're familiar with the genre, you know the setting.