
The Reincarnation of the Uchiha Family
by Grilled Eggs
About This Novel
During the Fourth Ninja War, looking at the coffin board of his ancestor Uchiha Madara rising in front of him, Uchiha Akira, then the Fifth Hokage, Demon Slayer Hizashi, Emperor of the Sea, and Hero Association S-class hero, decided to push him back. ...
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Official(34)Scraped 20d ago
I was almost fooled into missing this book by those bad reviews.
I have watched more than 50 pictures and I feel that it is really good. There is no inexplicable female character popping up out of nowhere to give the protagonist a halo of wisdom. Then the protagonist is very cautious, and then there is no such thing as a very poisonous plot like just seeing a woman and thinking that she can be accepted into the harem. Sure enough, I still like career-oriented protagonists. The author continues to work hard and is really looking forward to the future development of the plot (๑˙ー˙๑)
Your introduction and text are just trying to sell dogs on their own. What about the role of reincarnation? What about the other worlds you wrote about in your introduction?
Overall it's okay, I can see going to the third world. I can only say that the setting is okay, but the development feels too slow. The improvement in strength is too slow. Not to mention that you want to cultivate immortality, you have to open a few more worlds, and your world is a directional search. Wherever the dragon vein energy is placed, you can take it if you want. (The article does not reflect the feeling of poor energy at all. Every time, the protagonist feels that he is in this world. Only open the next dungeon when you can't improve). There is a saying. In the regular world of immortal cultivation, the shadow should be able to fight with the foundation builder (the kind with weak points), and then you can go directly to the world of immortal cultivation with the same highest combat power as you to get the basic magic. Isn't it good to improve it time and time again. As for my personal opinion on the first three worlds, Demon Slayer is okay, laying the foundation. I don't know what the use of One Piece is. I don't feel much about the improved strength, but I am still making a fuss. I have to join the dragon. I feel like I might as well not go to One Piece if I don't take the devil fruit. Giving one to Kenmi doesn't feel like it is of any use. You have written that the Samsara Watch can sense the energy of time and space. You might as well let the Samsara Watch absorb Devil Fruits to improve when you were a pirate (my personal opinion is that Devil Fruits are part of the laws of the world. After the Samsara Watch absorbs enough, it will form a small world (such as the moving castle, a fruit of space, time, etc.)). Then the most outrageous thing is the one-punch world. To be honest, this world is meaningless to people like the protagonist, because the strength of such a world is basically impossible to change. There is a bug on the ceiling of the world, and the limiter world cannot be opened automatically. If you want to open it, you need a power higher than that world. Just like Tatsumaki, these are the fighting abilities of ordinary people. Moreover, the protagonist is too petty. In the early stage, it was fine, and he learned swordsmanship to become stronger, but in the later stage, he completely developed towards bloodline, and the reason for traveling through the world was to complete and develop the bloodline. For now, bloodline completion is only at the six-level level, but the energy the protagonist spends on completing the bloodline is not proportional to the benefits. To put it bluntly, it will only reach the height of his ancestors, and then the bloodline will be meaningless. If you have this energy, it is better to find a complete path to follow (this path is higher than the final height of the bloodline). I don't object to using the power of bloodline. What I think is that the process of improving strength requires efforts that are basically proportional to the benefits. Bloodline can be used as a tool, but it cannot become the main strength. Also, the protagonist is too gentle and likes to teach people. After teaching this, he will teach that. They also like to give up their own advantages (plot) if they don't have the strength. For example, Obito has no friendship in the past, but later he and Minato have a little relationship. If Ben takes Obito away, the protagonist can smoothly develop Konoha to the fourth battle with the existing basic plan, and during this period, the Minato couple and the Uchiha clan will not have any trouble. Also, the fourth battle may not be possible. With Obito's strength, can he beat the current Konoha? And if you have this time to develop the protagonist, you may have six ways. Moreover, Lin can be rescued secretly (the protagonist's medical treatment is so strong), and the matter can be explained clearly to Obito in advance, and then he will forget to know about it (for fear of being found out by Ben), and then recall it later. Obito will come back only if Lin sister dies, and he does not have the strength to kill Minato and his wife. So the protagonist has destroyed all his good cards, and now people in Konoha are basically panicked when they go out.
Nowadays, when I write books, I like to increase my demon-slayer fighting power.
It's cliche and boring. I wrote Kato Dan but ended up writing it like Minato Namikaze. He graduated early in the war. It turned out that he had just graduated and was led by a jounin. He was still an elite jounin. He also grabbed bells and did D-level tasks of finding cats and dogs. Elite jonins are so worthless, right? He also had free time to play house with a few newly graduated genin. **, Some people say that the protagonist is cautious and not poisonous, and is about to go to the battlefield to kill you and me. I don't feel it at all, I just feel that the years are peaceful.
Blood after blood after blood after blood! It's not TM's blood stains
I'm currently reading chapter 137, the end of the demon slaying, three words. Monk text. [Emot=default,09/]If you accept it, you can read on. I can't watch it anyway.
This fan also believes that these aspects of the time traveler are well portrayed: 1. Be cautious. Before your strength is low, be rational, work hard, and develop silently, and do not consider yourself a protagonist and seek death to develop. 2. The plot is reasonable. From another aspect, it explains and depicts the ninja world without forcing wisdom. 3. The combination of righteousness and oddity. He plotted to seize the position of Hokage with great momentum, and there was no lack of decisiveness in killing him. There is no other story where the protagonist is sober when everyone else is a fool. 4. Repay kindness with kindness. Many Hinata and Uchiha people who have traveled through the ninja world always think that they are right no matter what the family is and why the clan leader is not good. I feel like a different kind of Uchiha Itachi.
It's okay, at least it's better than most fan fiction written by losers and idiots.
This book is very good and blends every moment together perfectly.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(34)Scraped 20d ago
I was almost fooled into missing this book by those bad reviews.
I have watched more than 50 pictures and I feel that it is really good. There is no inexplicable female character popping up out of nowhere to give the protagonist a halo of wisdom. Then the protagonist is very cautious, and then there is no such thing as a very poisonous plot like just seeing a woman and thinking that she can be accepted into the harem. Sure enough, I still like career-oriented protagonists. The author continues to work hard and is really looking forward to the future development of the plot (๑˙ー˙๑)
Your introduction and text are just trying to sell dogs on their own. What about the role of reincarnation? What about the other worlds you wrote about in your introduction?
Overall it's okay, I can see going to the third world. I can only say that the setting is okay, but the development feels too slow. The improvement in strength is too slow. Not to mention that you want to cultivate immortality, you have to open a few more worlds, and your world is a directional search. Wherever the dragon vein energy is placed, you can take it if you want. (The article does not reflect the feeling of poor energy at all. Every time, the protagonist feels that he is in this world. Only open the next dungeon when you can't improve). There is a saying. In the regular world of immortal cultivation, the shadow should be able to fight with the foundation builder (the kind with weak points), and then you can go directly to the world of immortal cultivation with the same highest combat power as you to get the basic magic. Isn't it good to improve it time and time again. As for my personal opinion on the first three worlds, Demon Slayer is okay, laying the foundation. I don't know what the use of One Piece is. I don't feel much about the improved strength, but I am still making a fuss. I have to join the dragon. I feel like I might as well not go to One Piece if I don't take the devil fruit. Giving one to Kenmi doesn't feel like it is of any use. You have written that the Samsara Watch can sense the energy of time and space. You might as well let the Samsara Watch absorb Devil Fruits to improve when you were a pirate (my personal opinion is that Devil Fruits are part of the laws of the world. After the Samsara Watch absorbs enough, it will form a small world (such as the moving castle, a fruit of space, time, etc.)). Then the most outrageous thing is the one-punch world. To be honest, this world is meaningless to people like the protagonist, because the strength of such a world is basically impossible to change. There is a bug on the ceiling of the world, and the limiter world cannot be opened automatically. If you want to open it, you need a power higher than that world. Just like Tatsumaki, these are the fighting abilities of ordinary people. Moreover, the protagonist is too petty. In the early stage, it was fine, and he learned swordsmanship to become stronger, but in the later stage, he completely developed towards bloodline, and the reason for traveling through the world was to complete and develop the bloodline. For now, bloodline completion is only at the six-level level, but the energy the protagonist spends on completing the bloodline is not proportional to the benefits. To put it bluntly, it will only reach the height of his ancestors, and then the bloodline will be meaningless. If you have this energy, it is better to find a complete path to follow (this path is higher than the final height of the bloodline). I don't object to using the power of bloodline. What I think is that the process of improving strength requires efforts that are basically proportional to the benefits. Bloodline can be used as a tool, but it cannot become the main strength. Also, the protagonist is too gentle and likes to teach people. After teaching this, he will teach that. They also like to give up their own advantages (plot) if they don't have the strength. For example, Obito has no friendship in the past, but later he and Minato have a little relationship. If Ben takes Obito away, the protagonist can smoothly develop Konoha to the fourth battle with the existing basic plan, and during this period, the Minato couple and the Uchiha clan will not have any trouble. Also, the fourth battle may not be possible. With Obito's strength, can he beat the current Konoha? And if you have this time to develop the protagonist, you may have six ways. Moreover, Lin can be rescued secretly (the protagonist's medical treatment is so strong), and the matter can be explained clearly to Obito in advance, and then he will forget to know about it (for fear of being found out by Ben), and then recall it later. Obito will come back only if Lin sister dies, and he does not have the strength to kill Minato and his wife. So the protagonist has destroyed all his good cards, and now people in Konoha are basically panicked when they go out.
Nowadays, when I write books, I like to increase my demon-slayer fighting power.
It's cliche and boring. I wrote Kato Dan but ended up writing it like Minato Namikaze. He graduated early in the war. It turned out that he had just graduated and was led by a jounin. He was still an elite jounin. He also grabbed bells and did D-level tasks of finding cats and dogs. Elite jonins are so worthless, right? He also had free time to play house with a few newly graduated genin. **, Some people say that the protagonist is cautious and not poisonous, and is about to go to the battlefield to kill you and me. I don't feel it at all, I just feel that the years are peaceful.
Blood after blood after blood after blood! It's not TM's blood stains
I'm currently reading chapter 137, the end of the demon slaying, three words. Monk text. [Emot=default,09/]If you accept it, you can read on. I can't watch it anyway.
This fan also believes that these aspects of the time traveler are well portrayed: 1. Be cautious. Before your strength is low, be rational, work hard, and develop silently, and do not consider yourself a protagonist and seek death to develop. 2. The plot is reasonable. From another aspect, it explains and depicts the ninja world without forcing wisdom. 3. The combination of righteousness and oddity. He plotted to seize the position of Hokage with great momentum, and there was no lack of decisiveness in killing him. There is no other story where the protagonist is sober when everyone else is a fool. 4. Repay kindness with kindness. Many Hinata and Uchiha people who have traveled through the ninja world always think that they are right no matter what the family is and why the clan leader is not good. I feel like a different kind of Uchiha Itachi.
It's okay, at least it's better than most fan fiction written by losers and idiots.
This book is very good and blends every moment together perfectly.









