
Simulating Immortal Cultivation: Starting from the Rise of the Family
About This Novel
A new book has been launched. I hope you can support it and enjoy the relaxed daily style. "I wanted to read books about sages, but I became a demon-slayer" Please support me a lot. If you like it, you can check it out.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(38)Scraped 13d ago
Come with Cheng Shen and have a look
One, two, three, four, five, six, eight, nine, zero
I will definitely prefer my direct blood relatives such as my children, and besides, there are concerns. Unless the three generations of the same clan are extremely outstanding, good things and good things will definitely be given to the real blood relatives. This aspect of family culture is very hypocritical, and I dare not face the reality. In fact, the closeness of relatives beyond three generations may not be as close as that of teachers and friends.
I can't stand it anymore when I see the Qianbabai piece of spiritual stone.
I don't know the specific reason, but I just feel uncomfortable looking at it.
Rubbish article, incorrect prices, and problems with the golden finger
Rubbish, one Foundation Establishment Pill costs 5,000, and the cost of the main medicine alone is only 1,000. With the other main medicines and auxiliary medicines, wouldn't it be 4,000 to 5,000? How many pills do you give per serving? ? ? How about these second-level talisman elixirs, one by one? Then if you use 5,000 to buy an unstable foundation-building pill, you might as well use it to buy 5,000 talismans. If you pile them up, you can kill someone.
So generous!
Let's raise it for a few days first. I'll look into the fattening point. The author will update as soon as possible.
. . .
I don't know how to use the simulator at all, and the protagonist is like a fool. .
For this kind of simulation novel, you can almost get an idea of the overall writing situation by reading the first few chapters. Let's just talk about the family crisis a year later at the beginning, and the protagonist is cheating. Is there a need to be so anxious about what will happen a year later? Shouldn't the first task be to carefully plan how to use your own cheats to maximize profits? But what does it say in the book? The protagonist actually worries about how to avenge the death of his family in the simulation? It's understandable that the protagonist in the simulation wants revenge, but is the protagonist outside the simulation that excited? Does it make sense? The author can set up a character, such as the original owner's obsession with the family. This means that as long as the crisis one year later cannot be perfectly resolved in the simulation, the original owner will not be able to practice smoothly in the simulation, thus affecting the income of each simulation. Therefore, the protagonist must first try his best to solve the crisis problem, so that the simulation can smoothly obtain an increase in income. There is actually a clear direction to solve the problem: One is to rely on others and try to persuade the protagonist's genius brother to become a disciple of an entry-level boss and gain protection. The second is for the protagonist to use simulation to study the formations and try to see if he can arrange more powerful formations to ambush the enemy and solve the problem. The third is that the protagonist uses simulation to find clues to the elixir that can extend the life of the clan leader. This is the most uneconomical. It is difficult and treats the symptoms rather than the root cause. Otherwise, it will take a lot of simulation trial and error time. The best way is for the protagonist to guide a message to himself in the simulation, study hard on alchemy, weapon training and other techniques to accumulate spiritual stones, and then hire people to take revenge. This way, the skills can be maxed out first. With technical support, the real protagonist can obtain a large number of spiritual stones for simulation. Then in the simulation, we look for elixirs that can improve our qualifications and practice speed, and then we start crazy simulations to improve our practice, so that we can break the game and improve our practice at the same time.
It's okay to watch it without thinking
Isn't this family developed by the protagonist grabbing resources? Then what's the point of starting a family to cultivate immortality? Why not immediately simulate ten thousand years and the protagonist becomes a god?
Is it almost getting cold? It's even less so.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(38)Scraped 13d ago
Come with Cheng Shen and have a look
One, two, three, four, five, six, eight, nine, zero
I will definitely prefer my direct blood relatives such as my children, and besides, there are concerns. Unless the three generations of the same clan are extremely outstanding, good things and good things will definitely be given to the real blood relatives. This aspect of family culture is very hypocritical, and I dare not face the reality. In fact, the closeness of relatives beyond three generations may not be as close as that of teachers and friends.
I can't stand it anymore when I see the Qianbabai piece of spiritual stone.
I don't know the specific reason, but I just feel uncomfortable looking at it.
Rubbish article, incorrect prices, and problems with the golden finger
Rubbish, one Foundation Establishment Pill costs 5,000, and the cost of the main medicine alone is only 1,000. With the other main medicines and auxiliary medicines, wouldn't it be 4,000 to 5,000? How many pills do you give per serving? ? ? How about these second-level talisman elixirs, one by one? Then if you use 5,000 to buy an unstable foundation-building pill, you might as well use it to buy 5,000 talismans. If you pile them up, you can kill someone.
So generous!
Let's raise it for a few days first. I'll look into the fattening point. The author will update as soon as possible.
. . .
I don't know how to use the simulator at all, and the protagonist is like a fool. .
For this kind of simulation novel, you can almost get an idea of the overall writing situation by reading the first few chapters. Let's just talk about the family crisis a year later at the beginning, and the protagonist is cheating. Is there a need to be so anxious about what will happen a year later? Shouldn't the first task be to carefully plan how to use your own cheats to maximize profits? But what does it say in the book? The protagonist actually worries about how to avenge the death of his family in the simulation? It's understandable that the protagonist in the simulation wants revenge, but is the protagonist outside the simulation that excited? Does it make sense? The author can set up a character, such as the original owner's obsession with the family. This means that as long as the crisis one year later cannot be perfectly resolved in the simulation, the original owner will not be able to practice smoothly in the simulation, thus affecting the income of each simulation. Therefore, the protagonist must first try his best to solve the crisis problem, so that the simulation can smoothly obtain an increase in income. There is actually a clear direction to solve the problem: One is to rely on others and try to persuade the protagonist's genius brother to become a disciple of an entry-level boss and gain protection. The second is for the protagonist to use simulation to study the formations and try to see if he can arrange more powerful formations to ambush the enemy and solve the problem. The third is that the protagonist uses simulation to find clues to the elixir that can extend the life of the clan leader. This is the most uneconomical. It is difficult and treats the symptoms rather than the root cause. Otherwise, it will take a lot of simulation trial and error time. The best way is for the protagonist to guide a message to himself in the simulation, study hard on alchemy, weapon training and other techniques to accumulate spiritual stones, and then hire people to take revenge. This way, the skills can be maxed out first. With technical support, the real protagonist can obtain a large number of spiritual stones for simulation. Then in the simulation, we look for elixirs that can improve our qualifications and practice speed, and then we start crazy simulations to improve our practice, so that we can break the game and improve our practice at the same time.
It's okay to watch it without thinking
Isn't this family developed by the protagonist grabbing resources? Then what's the point of starting a family to cultivate immortality? Why not immediately simulate ten thousand years and the protagonist becomes a god?
Is it almost getting cold? It's even less so.










