
Human Contractor
by Bewildered
About This Novel
Since the beginning of the world, the protagonists of the world have been changing from generation to generation. The original protagonists, the innate demon gods, were eliminated because of their strong individual strength and caused great damage to the world every time they fought. The second generation of protagonists, the dragon, phoenix, and unicorn, have emerged as the three major races. However, the power of the second-generation protagonists is still very strong, especially since they are different from the innate demon gods who like to fight alone. They are bound by their racial blood, and when they fight, they can cause even more damage to the world than the innate demon gods. So there is the rise of the third generation of protagonists, the witch and the demon. The two races control the sky and the earth, but the history is always the same. Their destructive power is still strong, and they finally lead to the end of both death, leaving the world in the hands of the weakest human race. Another ten thousand years have passed. After first experiencing the awakening of the Way of Heaven, the birth of the Way of Earth, and the formation of the Way of Humanity, the concealment of the aura of heaven and earth caused the human race, as the protagonist of the world, to do less and less damage to the world, until the birth of science in the Age of Dharma. The pollution caused by science is greater than the damage caused to the world by the innate demons. Coupled with the birth of materialism and the trough of idealism, people themselves have begun to become extremely depraved, and even the devils living in hell have become idols. The world is about to give up on the human race as the protagonist, natural disasters are beginning to emerge one after another, endless demons and ghosts in hell, and even man-eating monsters from multiple worlds are being introduced. When disaster is inevitable, humanity based on human race is prepared to make a desperate struggle. . . . . .
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