I Eat Tomatoes
More chapters about the Archean Eon Realm (and painting) are all I want. Meng Chuan is actually fairly unique amongst Xianxia protagonists (the ones I'd consider heroic in any sense at least) in that he mostly refuses to give his loved ones resources to help them. His interactions with them thus are pretty interesting and revealing, far more so than just reading about him getting more powerful by sitting in a place randomly and cultivating for thousands of years. He's really defined by the war he was in for the first half of the novel, and it's great when we see more of that. This novel's called Archean Eon Art. While painting's been getting a bit of focus recently, though only marginally since we haven't gotten a chapter dedicated to his paintings in forever, the Archean Eon part just hasn't been involved at all. That's a real shame since when everything he treasures is safe, there are no real stakes. We know that Meng Chuan won't ever truly lose personally, so all the fights are just not that memorable. It's telling that I remember the tactics and events in the war far better than all the exploration he's done since leaving Archean Eon Realm, despite the latter being far more recent.