
Changsheng, I Have Been Farming in the Sect for Ten Thousand Years
by Return To The Past And Renew The Relationship
About This Novel
Li Ran traveled through time and became immortal. Originally, he just wanted to live in peace. But it seemed like something was wrong. Five thousand years later, the sect leader begged him on his knees not to leave. What are you doing? I am just a farmer. Ten thousand years later, an old man with white hair knelt on his knees and shouted to the back mountain that a great disaster was coming for our sect, and he also begged ancestor Li Ran to come out of the mountain.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 12d ago
I was looking for a book today, and when I saw this one, I wanted to read it casually, but I didn't want to become more and more fascinated by it. This is the farming cultivation stream that I want to watch.
I slipped away after seeing Chapter 8. Xingcai's emotional line is inexplicable. Are you rich and can't bear to buy shoes? The protagonist doesn't like hygiene yet? Don't you wash your face? Can you be considered a beggar?
This book is okay. After reading the first hundred chapters, I don't feel there are any major flaws. It's pretty good.
I like this type of book, but I don't know what the author is writing about. He often writes inexplicably. Voice input? Or what the situation is.
Uh-huh
It's like a running story with no goals. It just seems like I've improved my character through whatever I've been doing for thirty years. The supporting characters have no world background and no fleshed-out characters. When I see it now, it's just a lucky draw, and it's inexplicably offline. There are no characters, no stories, and nothing. Only Xingcai barely has an emotional line, but it is inexplicably missing from the beginning to the end. With so little feedback, the protagonist is like a savage. You don't know how to write a dungeon like someone else's, but write about a few geniuses who bring out some power to enrich the world view. Competition, there is nothing, and you don't know what the protagonist's motivation is for training? Does it make sense to go to another world? If you go fishing every day and talk about the character of the protagonist, then if this world is invincible and you can just play around, why go to another world?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 12d ago
I was looking for a book today, and when I saw this one, I wanted to read it casually, but I didn't want to become more and more fascinated by it. This is the farming cultivation stream that I want to watch.
I slipped away after seeing Chapter 8. Xingcai's emotional line is inexplicable. Are you rich and can't bear to buy shoes? The protagonist doesn't like hygiene yet? Don't you wash your face? Can you be considered a beggar?
This book is okay. After reading the first hundred chapters, I don't feel there are any major flaws. It's pretty good.
I like this type of book, but I don't know what the author is writing about. He often writes inexplicably. Voice input? Or what the situation is.
Uh-huh
It's like a running story with no goals. It just seems like I've improved my character through whatever I've been doing for thirty years. The supporting characters have no world background and no fleshed-out characters. When I see it now, it's just a lucky draw, and it's inexplicably offline. There are no characters, no stories, and nothing. Only Xingcai barely has an emotional line, but it is inexplicably missing from the beginning to the end. With so little feedback, the protagonist is like a savage. You don't know how to write a dungeon like someone else's, but write about a few geniuses who bring out some power to enrich the world view. Competition, there is nothing, and you don't know what the protagonist's motivation is for training? Does it make sense to go to another world? If you go fishing every day and talk about the character of the protagonist, then if this world is invincible and you can just play around, why go to another world?









