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This is a solid simulation system novel. The humor is good, the action is good, the world building is interesting.Aside from some minor translation errors here and there, the writing is as smooth as it gets here. And the author does begin to summarize simulations better as the story goes on.I recommend it.
This guy is the number 1 eco-terrorist of the cultivation world.
Botanists and flower shops everywhere thank you sir.Seriously though, explicit violence=okmentioning sexual assault=flower picking.
At this point, the name switches are like:
Logic prevails.
This novel is a lot of fun. Classic concepts and genres blended just right. The MC has a Goku-like addiction to training due to his attribute/proficiency system. The setting is Earth going through a mana/origin force awakening apocalypse. The humans who deviate in awakening become powerful zombies who terrorize the rest. The reclusive MC is constantly dragged, by circumstance, into the role of a hero.Once humanity migrates to the Black Mist World and enters the Black Tower's myriad races competition for survival and Godhood, things get real spicy.Although some of the training sequences can drag, and there are some very minor translation errors here and there, the comedy and action make up for it. Give this novel a chance as it gets better and better after he familiarizes himself with the system.
Molesters meet on a narrow road...
A solid, generic cultuvation fantasy with an unlikely protagonist. The isekai genre has a problem in general with pre-transmigration character building. I have a hard time believing a mentally unstable kid who was abused until he committed a murder suicide is capable of this.It could be argued that his talents were suppressed by circumstance (aka abusive father), and a fresh chance at life in a magical world unlocked his potential. However, all we get are strange dreams with no indication that he has any untapped potential.By spending so little time exploring Darius King, Liam's new life feels like a fever dream. With that said, the story from this point is as good as most on this platform.Maybe I'm just tired of the isekai, transmigration formula. Take a loser, outcast, pitiful existence and allow them to be reborn in glory with a system or talent they didn't have before and bake it in the oven. In reality, a pathetic kid in one life will just be a magical pathetic kid in the next.Writing trauma, and its effects, is difficult but to ignore the impact of murdering your father and then yourself weakens your story . Truckkun exists as a plot device for a reason (clean, unexpected break). If you want a spicier pre-transmigration plot, spend some more time exploring it.
By definition, a "hero" is an individual who selflessly saves the innocent and punishes the guilty. On this app I have seen many protagonists deemed "braindead" for exhibiting traditional heroic qualities. It doesn't help that most of these writers are amateurs on a pricey for-profit platform.I haven't read this, so I am not criticizing the review, All serious reviewers should be respected. Webnovels have their own internal logic and values, and it can be aggravating when the author shatters it at every turn. Just saying there is room for traditional heroes along with the red-pilled edgelord schemer [img=recommend][img=recommend][img=recommend]
I understand what the author was going for but it came off as too tragic. I get this charm goddess' nature was seduction and manipulation, but she came off too innocent and playful.While it was stated in exposition that she was undoubtedly dangerous and would bring disasters with or without Shang An, their interactions were sweet and heartwarming.This chapter left a bad taste in my mouth. Love and logic are often at odds. The "fish in the sea" is a nice theory, and considering the circumstances, Shang An should listen, in reality, most people can't see the forest through the trees.Jiang Hao's actions, while coming from a good instinct, was callous and dismissive of Shang An's sacrifice. If the Charm Goddess was depicted as more actively nefarious and deceitful, then this chapter would be great.
Almost all cultivation novels are loosely based on bagua/trigrams, taoist system. In that system the moon light or lunar energy is not viewed through the modern scientific lens. The moon has metaphysical significance, associated with yin and represents various natural and supernatural forces.Although I find this novel bland, it is unfair to criticize the author for not basing the cultivation system on modern day astrophysics.