
Xianfulongyuan
by Hua Yurong
About This Novel
See how she, an ordinary girl, unswervingly walks towards the path of cultivating immortality, step by step through her own efforts.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(96)Scraped 25d ago
I think the biggest flaw of this book is that the heroine is treated as a human being, but she is not a human being! She is a dragon! There is a big difference between dragons and humans! Dragons are much stronger than humans, even cubs are much stronger than humans.
About the heroine
Apart from anything else, I personally feel that as a purple golden dragon, she must be proud and domineering at heart. However, after reading more than a hundred chapters, I only see the heroine as weak, the kind who feels like anyone can step on her, yet she has to be careful to laugh with her. Besides, dragons should be very protective of their own things, right? She has a strong sense of territory, but I don't see it in the heroine either. She is a complete human cultivator. Finally, the heroine is too stupid. She was 25 years old in her previous life. Life as an orphan should not be easy, so she should be very cautious and guarded. She should understand the rules of life of the lower class. She is reincarnated as a purple gold dragon, has a noble status, is proud and domineering, is aloof, and is extremely favored. She has witnessed the destruction of her family and the suffering of her parents and relatives. She bears the responsibility. Even so, she should be noble, ruthless, but also smart and cunning. She has too many experiences and secrets, so she should be cautious and guarded. Dragons are supposed to be noble and cool, looking down upon all things. Even if they are dormant and low-key, they are still aloof at heart. As for the heroine, she gives the impression that she is a complete lower-class orphan girl. I also don't like the heroine's way of learning. She learns too much at once, such as refining weapons, refining elixirs, and drawing talismans, biting off more than she can chew.
I just read the first chapter and I don't want to read anymore. I can't stand it anymore. The heroine even said that she was twenty-five years old in her previous life. I think she is almost like a child.
I was also drunk, and Long also had Qi training, foundation building, golden elixir...
The book is quite good, but the male protagonist appears last. . . . I was drunk too. . . . I always thought Xuan Mo was the male protagonist. . . .
Isn't the dragon the boss of animals? It seems that this dragon is no different from a human being.
Very well written! It's very touching to see it!
Doesn't it mean that the strong are respected? Why are the ancestral halls of the beast tribe divided into men and women? This is not an ancient feudal society. Is the author so conflicted?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(96)Scraped 25d ago
I think the biggest flaw of this book is that the heroine is treated as a human being, but she is not a human being! She is a dragon! There is a big difference between dragons and humans! Dragons are much stronger than humans, even cubs are much stronger than humans.
About the heroine
Apart from anything else, I personally feel that as a purple golden dragon, she must be proud and domineering at heart. However, after reading more than a hundred chapters, I only see the heroine as weak, the kind who feels like anyone can step on her, yet she has to be careful to laugh with her. Besides, dragons should be very protective of their own things, right? She has a strong sense of territory, but I don't see it in the heroine either. She is a complete human cultivator. Finally, the heroine is too stupid. She was 25 years old in her previous life. Life as an orphan should not be easy, so she should be very cautious and guarded. She should understand the rules of life of the lower class. She is reincarnated as a purple gold dragon, has a noble status, is proud and domineering, is aloof, and is extremely favored. She has witnessed the destruction of her family and the suffering of her parents and relatives. She bears the responsibility. Even so, she should be noble, ruthless, but also smart and cunning. She has too many experiences and secrets, so she should be cautious and guarded. Dragons are supposed to be noble and cool, looking down upon all things. Even if they are dormant and low-key, they are still aloof at heart. As for the heroine, she gives the impression that she is a complete lower-class orphan girl. I also don't like the heroine's way of learning. She learns too much at once, such as refining weapons, refining elixirs, and drawing talismans, biting off more than she can chew.
I just read the first chapter and I don't want to read anymore. I can't stand it anymore. The heroine even said that she was twenty-five years old in her previous life. I think she is almost like a child.
I was also drunk, and Long also had Qi training, foundation building, golden elixir...
The book is quite good, but the male protagonist appears last. . . . I was drunk too. . . . I always thought Xuan Mo was the male protagonist. . . .
Isn't the dragon the boss of animals? It seems that this dragon is no different from a human being.
Very well written! It's very touching to see it!
Doesn't it mean that the strong are respected? Why are the ancestral halls of the beast tribe divided into men and women? This is not an ancient feudal society. Is the author so conflicted?








