
Why Can't This Arcanist Be Killed?
by Wuyou
About This Novel
"What is the greatest advantage of an arcanist?" "Able to analyze laws and create spells, the potential for growth is almost unlimited. The most powerful can even rival gods." "What about the shortcomings?" "The body is fragile and grows slowly. It is difficult to develop stably to the later stages. It is also extremely afraid of warriors and assassins getting close." "What if... An arcanist becomes immortal?" "... Then he is destined to hold the throne high!" After traveling through time, Kane, who was chosen as a sacrifice, awakened his immortality in a desperate situation. Since then, a great arcanist who has embarked on the road of close combat with an immortal body has embarked on the journey to become a god. [Melee Master|Pseudo DND|Multiple worldviews|System|Decisive killing]
What Readers Think
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Official(2)
This book is quite good, but originally I thought it was mainly related to magic, but after reading it for a long time, the main character fought in close quarters and relied on a mage to throw things from a distance. The main problem is that the author has too much malice towards the protagonist. Looking at it now, do you think there are good people around the protagonist? Have. But none of them paid for the protagonist. The protagonist can waste time for Shar to the point of being recaptured, and even risk death to save her. Is Shar a good woman? Yes. But has she done anything good for the protagonist? She escaped because she failed and was saved. She didn't see the protagonist's body, so she thought the protagonist was dead and didn't look for it. Then the protagonist didn't know why he just didn't look for her. When he escaped, he wanted to take her with him, saying that it would be helpful. But the result came out, eh, I just didn't look for her, I just played. Then the protagonist can only think of his plan, so he is targeted by others and can only become a Death Apostle. There are other supporting characters as well. The protagonist is always giving away. The decisions of other people are always wrong. If they affect the protagonist, they will only apologize. The organ trade is the protagonist's butt, and the others are pure waste. The main character also has a pure labor mentality. I don't know why others help him. He doesn't want anything in return and he is just a good person. He just wants to fight for others. It's great to have a supporting character who can't give and a protagonist who is giving. Of course, this book doesn't have any particularly big poisonous points, and the plot is pretty good, but it's the small poisonous points like the one before that make it frustrating to read. I hope the author can write better and better.
So far, it looks pretty good
Although fuzzy data is a bit uncomfortable for some obsessive-compulsive critics (after all, most of us are instinctively picky) But from what I've read so far, it's a wonderful adventure with vivid characters and a smooth plot.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)
This book is quite good, but originally I thought it was mainly related to magic, but after reading it for a long time, the main character fought in close quarters and relied on a mage to throw things from a distance. The main problem is that the author has too much malice towards the protagonist. Looking at it now, do you think there are good people around the protagonist? Have. But none of them paid for the protagonist. The protagonist can waste time for Shar to the point of being recaptured, and even risk death to save her. Is Shar a good woman? Yes. But has she done anything good for the protagonist? She escaped because she failed and was saved. She didn't see the protagonist's body, so she thought the protagonist was dead and didn't look for it. Then the protagonist didn't know why he just didn't look for her. When he escaped, he wanted to take her with him, saying that it would be helpful. But the result came out, eh, I just didn't look for her, I just played. Then the protagonist can only think of his plan, so he is targeted by others and can only become a Death Apostle. There are other supporting characters as well. The protagonist is always giving away. The decisions of other people are always wrong. If they affect the protagonist, they will only apologize. The organ trade is the protagonist's butt, and the others are pure waste. The main character also has a pure labor mentality. I don't know why others help him. He doesn't want anything in return and he is just a good person. He just wants to fight for others. It's great to have a supporting character who can't give and a protagonist who is giving. Of course, this book doesn't have any particularly big poisonous points, and the plot is pretty good, but it's the small poisonous points like the one before that make it frustrating to read. I hope the author can write better and better.
So far, it looks pretty good
Although fuzzy data is a bit uncomfortable for some obsessive-compulsive critics (after all, most of us are instinctively picky) But from what I've read so far, it's a wonderful adventure with vivid characters and a smooth plot.









