
The Age of Wizards, Beginning with the Alchemist Wizard
by Knowledge From Natural History
About This Novel
Endless star realms, plane wars, the wizard's floating city conquered one world after another. The wizard academy, the bloody examination, and the towering wizard tower transport batches of wizards. Richard, who became a wizard's apprentice, opened the miraculous furnace deep in his soul. As long as he continued to refine the raw materials, he could acquire knowledge and skills... The weapons of a veteran of hundreds of battles could be refined into martial arts passed down from generation to generation. The cryptic notes of ancient wizards can distill lost knowledge. The remains of brutal monsters can extract the bloodline of monsters. In this age of exploration in the wizarding world, Richard will eventually become the man who leads the times.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(23)Scraped 19d ago
It feels like there is a deliberate attempt to reduce the presence of the Miracle Crucible in Goldfinger. This novel Goldfinger is the biggest highlight. I don't know what the author is thinking. Why give it a plug-in? It's smart to write the main character from the beginning.
It's okay. It's not so brainless or intellectually depressing, but we mainly watch the protagonist use witchcraft and alchemy items to output long-range firepower, and we don't watch the protagonist engage in melee combat. I don't see any other problems with this book. I'll comment after I see it. Thank you
This is completely based on the setting of the Wizarding World journey. It doesn't matter whether it is reasonable or not. People took the path of physical cultivation because they had no golden fingers and no support. As a result, the author's painting of a tiger cannot be compared to a dog.
A wizard fights in close combat every day. Why don't you write a hammer? Who watches the wizard Wen watch the protagonist practicing every day? It's disgusting.
Damn it, wizard novels are all about imagination, so unimaginative.
A very nice book, one of the best among wizarding novels. Worth reading for those who are not well versed in reading
These reviews always write about which book and plot are used, and you just say which chapter and which plot is unreasonable, which data is wrong, whether it is intentional or not, how many chapters are irrelevant sub-plots, and it is always a lot of empty talk when it comes to the actual details.
There is a reason for the poor rating
Zero-level spells come with open mouth and shut up, there is no learning process.
After reading this book, I remembered that the evil gods seemed to invade from the Sea of Souls.
I would like to ask, what does this book have to do with the Wizarding Age?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(23)Scraped 19d ago
It feels like there is a deliberate attempt to reduce the presence of the Miracle Crucible in Goldfinger. This novel Goldfinger is the biggest highlight. I don't know what the author is thinking. Why give it a plug-in? It's smart to write the main character from the beginning.
It's okay. It's not so brainless or intellectually depressing, but we mainly watch the protagonist use witchcraft and alchemy items to output long-range firepower, and we don't watch the protagonist engage in melee combat. I don't see any other problems with this book. I'll comment after I see it. Thank you
This is completely based on the setting of the Wizarding World journey. It doesn't matter whether it is reasonable or not. People took the path of physical cultivation because they had no golden fingers and no support. As a result, the author's painting of a tiger cannot be compared to a dog.
A wizard fights in close combat every day. Why don't you write a hammer? Who watches the wizard Wen watch the protagonist practicing every day? It's disgusting.
Damn it, wizard novels are all about imagination, so unimaginative.
A very nice book, one of the best among wizarding novels. Worth reading for those who are not well versed in reading
These reviews always write about which book and plot are used, and you just say which chapter and which plot is unreasonable, which data is wrong, whether it is intentional or not, how many chapters are irrelevant sub-plots, and it is always a lot of empty talk when it comes to the actual details.
There is a reason for the poor rating
Zero-level spells come with open mouth and shut up, there is no learning process.
After reading this book, I remembered that the evil gods seemed to invade from the Sea of Souls.
I would like to ask, what does this book have to do with the Wizarding Age?









