
From the Hidden Dragon, the Water Spread All over the Sky
by Taiyinjuzi
About This Novel
The new book "I Teach the Way of Swordsmanship in the Ninja World", those who are interested can take a look~... In the world of the sea, he controls the hidden dragon, and wherever he goes, there are turbulent waves; under one person, his martial arts can reach the top of the gods; in the bright moon of Qin Dynasty, he is born noble and inherits the name of King Yu;... Shui Qianhuan travels across the heavens and proves to be the only one in the world. [Canghai (Martial Arts) (Ended)] - [Martial Arts Grandmaster + Under One Person (Urban Martial Arts Power) (Ended)] - [Main World] - [Qin Shi Mingyue (Ended)]...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 20d ago
Bullshit
The third golden chapter is written in a mess. Anyone who can read this nonsense is a talented person.
If you don't do anything serious, you either want women or raise girls. It's really outrageous.
This book: The plot is interesting, the characters are vivid, the system is clear, there are many foreshadowings, the fighting scenes are like being there, the protagonist's character description is very good... Etc. All in all This book is a piece of shit Finally, to summarize my thoughts after watching this: Confucius didn't understand, and Mencius was confused. The key is that even I didn't understand what this grandson wrote...
Very well written, why Xian Bi has green hair. . . Blue + yellow = green?
Water, water, sea! You are all water! ! ! !
After reading the introduction, I felt that there was no content and it was all water.
A good book with a novel setting
I think this book is quite good... The first three chapters are quite smooth and there is nothing "nonsense" about it. The author's idea of using cultivation techniques to travel through all the worlds is also very novel, the character description is also very good, and the plot development is also in line with common sense. The language is beautiful and fluent, and there are many good words and sentences. The writing makes people feel immersed in it, and the reading experience is very good... Why are there so many people complaining about it? Obviously there's nothing wrong with the writing style...
It's rare to see someone write a novel like Kunlun Canghai
The 10 most evil Chinese characters, I don't want to write so many. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 20d ago
Bullshit
The third golden chapter is written in a mess. Anyone who can read this nonsense is a talented person.
If you don't do anything serious, you either want women or raise girls. It's really outrageous.
This book: The plot is interesting, the characters are vivid, the system is clear, there are many foreshadowings, the fighting scenes are like being there, the protagonist's character description is very good... Etc. All in all This book is a piece of shit Finally, to summarize my thoughts after watching this: Confucius didn't understand, and Mencius was confused. The key is that even I didn't understand what this grandson wrote...
Very well written, why Xian Bi has green hair. . . Blue + yellow = green?
Water, water, sea! You are all water! ! ! !
After reading the introduction, I felt that there was no content and it was all water.
A good book with a novel setting
I think this book is quite good... The first three chapters are quite smooth and there is nothing "nonsense" about it. The author's idea of using cultivation techniques to travel through all the worlds is also very novel, the character description is also very good, and the plot development is also in line with common sense. The language is beautiful and fluent, and there are many good words and sentences. The writing makes people feel immersed in it, and the reading experience is very good... Why are there so many people complaining about it? Obviously there's nothing wrong with the writing style...
It's rare to see someone write a novel like Kunlun Canghai
The 10 most evil Chinese characters, I don't want to write so many. . . . . . . . . . . . .































