
The Sun God Left My Body, I Am Cultivating Immortality in the Steam Age
by Four Dimensional Mi Zhang Acridine
About This Novel
The twenty-eight-year-old Taoist genius Chen Qing left his body for the first time, but was accidentally dragged into another world by a strange force and possessed by the mysterious investigator Luo Lin. The sun god is injured and the three pure beings are silent. In this age of steam, when the power of the god falls into the world, he will use his spells to tear apart the monsters in the night. The gods of the past fell into madness, and everything turned into strange "abnormalities". In the prayers of believers, the shadow of the past will envelope the entire world. Look at this ascetic from the East, he will eventually open a path for ascension for this world!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(7)Scraped 2d ago
Very interesting story. But what I really want to complain about is that the protagonist's combat ability and combat wisdom are not like the Yang Shen boss who is about to ascend, but more like a minor cultivator in the Qi refining period. A lion fights a rabbit with all his strength, not to mention facing a god's vessel. When he had the opportunity to enlarge the move, he didn't use his full strength. He had to do it a second time. When he had the opportunity to use it a second time, he still worried about the gain and loss. It was really speechless. The result was that his teammates were killed while blocking the knife. The fact that a teammate died in battle was also a plot kill. It was actually due to a moment of carelessness. He was not a novice. In this kind of battle, he would be careless and not use the most difficult math problems to defeat the boss? Is this consistent with logic and character?
Sir, please help me!
Thank you to the members for the seven-day free offer It's hard to judge whether this book is good or not. The protagonist of Xianxia is thrown into a western fantasy setting and is said to be resolving the incident while re-taking the road to ascension. The advantage is that it is invincible at the beginning. The Taoist spells are dimensionality reduction attacks in the world view, which is very enjoyable to watch. The battle scenes are also beautifully described. The protagonist in the front is completely in accordance with the Taoist heart and does what he should do. Why can't I watch it halfway through? Firstly, the protagonist's strength is very vague. When fighting a mini-boss in the front, I have to ask someone to wait for a minute for the protagonist to chant, but not long after, I can sing and fight at the same time. Secondly, the part where the actress's accident happened is a bit too strange. The protagonist's inexplicable Madonna and Riddler's disciples appear very suddenly, and the sudden wave of big events and the memory erasure technique are very awkward. Although this part of the plot is interesting, I feel that the arrangement should be more rigorous. Generally speaking, it is a pretty good book. Book lovers who like the combination of Chinese and Western fantasy backgrounds can give it a try~
It feels a bit fragmented. It feels like the protagonist has gone through several battles and has not grown at all. His cultivation has improved, but his behavior is still a bit submissive.
After it was put on the shelves, the more I wrote, the more boring it became, hehe.
Really average
That's weird. There's no heroine yet. Overall, it's okay.
It doesn't look poisonous now, can you recommend it?
The setting is good, Taoists go to a strange world and sweep across all directions, but the author is incompetent and the writing is a mess. First of all, the author's values are basically random, and he can play with the third young master of the Tang family. Then the protagonist cannot be created well, and a female supporting character has been turned into an anomaly. It is clearly emphasized over and over again in the previous article that becoming an anomaly is already hopeless, but the protagonist has no reason to believe that he can change her back, and then just watch her kill her there. Dozens of innocent passers-by died and he pretended not to see it. Typically, the lives of people he knows are his, but the lives of passers-by are not. A protagonist like you still practices Taoism? It's more like cultivating demons.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(7)Scraped 2d ago
Very interesting story. But what I really want to complain about is that the protagonist's combat ability and combat wisdom are not like the Yang Shen boss who is about to ascend, but more like a minor cultivator in the Qi refining period. A lion fights a rabbit with all his strength, not to mention facing a god's vessel. When he had the opportunity to enlarge the move, he didn't use his full strength. He had to do it a second time. When he had the opportunity to use it a second time, he still worried about the gain and loss. It was really speechless. The result was that his teammates were killed while blocking the knife. The fact that a teammate died in battle was also a plot kill. It was actually due to a moment of carelessness. He was not a novice. In this kind of battle, he would be careless and not use the most difficult math problems to defeat the boss? Is this consistent with logic and character?
Sir, please help me!
Thank you to the members for the seven-day free offer It's hard to judge whether this book is good or not. The protagonist of Xianxia is thrown into a western fantasy setting and is said to be resolving the incident while re-taking the road to ascension. The advantage is that it is invincible at the beginning. The Taoist spells are dimensionality reduction attacks in the world view, which is very enjoyable to watch. The battle scenes are also beautifully described. The protagonist in the front is completely in accordance with the Taoist heart and does what he should do. Why can't I watch it halfway through? Firstly, the protagonist's strength is very vague. When fighting a mini-boss in the front, I have to ask someone to wait for a minute for the protagonist to chant, but not long after, I can sing and fight at the same time. Secondly, the part where the actress's accident happened is a bit too strange. The protagonist's inexplicable Madonna and Riddler's disciples appear very suddenly, and the sudden wave of big events and the memory erasure technique are very awkward. Although this part of the plot is interesting, I feel that the arrangement should be more rigorous. Generally speaking, it is a pretty good book. Book lovers who like the combination of Chinese and Western fantasy backgrounds can give it a try~
It feels a bit fragmented. It feels like the protagonist has gone through several battles and has not grown at all. His cultivation has improved, but his behavior is still a bit submissive.
After it was put on the shelves, the more I wrote, the more boring it became, hehe.
Really average
That's weird. There's no heroine yet. Overall, it's okay.
It doesn't look poisonous now, can you recommend it?
The setting is good, Taoists go to a strange world and sweep across all directions, but the author is incompetent and the writing is a mess. First of all, the author's values are basically random, and he can play with the third young master of the Tang family. Then the protagonist cannot be created well, and a female supporting character has been turned into an anomaly. It is clearly emphasized over and over again in the previous article that becoming an anomaly is already hopeless, but the protagonist has no reason to believe that he can change her back, and then just watch her kill her there. Dozens of innocent passers-by died and he pretended not to see it. Typically, the lives of people he knows are his, but the lives of passers-by are not. A protagonist like you still practices Taoism? It's more like cultivating demons.









