
A Buddhist Monk Who Broke the Precepts and Signed in the Sutra Pavilion for a Hundred Years
by Stormy Deer
About This Novel
Tang Yu traveled through the world of high martial arts. In order to avoid being hunted by his enemies, he was forced to become a monk. He joined Dalin Temple and was assigned to the Tibetan Scripture Pavilion to guard Buddhist scriptures. I thought I would be accompanied by the Green Lantern Ancient Buddha for the rest of my life, but suddenly I awakened to the god-level sign-in system. As long as you sign in at a specific location, you can get various rewards. "Ding! The host signed in at the Mahavira Palace and received a reward of heaven-level external skills [Dragon and Elephant Prajna Kung Fu]." "Ding! The host signed in at the Sutra Pavilion and received a reward of heaven-level internal skills [Yi Jin Marrow Cleansing Sutra]." "Ding! The host signed in at the Ksitigarbha Temple and received a reward of yellow-level martial arts. [Powerful Vajra Palm]. "Ding! The host signed in at the Zhengdao Academy and received the earth-level martial arts reward [Buddhist Six-Character Mantra]." "Ding! The host signed in at the Enforcement Academy and received the heaven-level martial arts reward [Tathagata Palm]." In this way, Tang Yu signed in for many years. One day, the demonic way invades the Qianguo martial arts forest, and Dalin Temple is in danger of destroying the sect. A palm technique descended from the sky to kill the invading enemies, and the whole world was shocked. Only then did they know that Buddhism has a world-beating divine monk!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 24d ago
Poisonous
There is a sign-in system, do you still need to study secretly? I can't die fast enough.
not bad
I hope I can be more creative. The sign-in text is too ordinary.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 24d ago
Poisonous
There is a sign-in system, do you still need to study secretly? I can't die fast enough.
not bad
I hope I can be more creative. The sign-in text is too ordinary.









