
Cultivation for Hundreds of Generations: I Have the Heavenly Book of Merit and Virtue
by Ge Qianchen
About This Novel
Yu Yan mistakenly entered the world of immortality. Unexpectedly, there was no way to achieve immortality. His bones were rotten and his body wasted for seventy years. In the end, he was like a mirror. Fortunately, he carries a book of merits for hundreds of generations, and the good deeds he accumulates can be continued in the next life. The depletion of virtues can change spiritual roots, life span, understanding, bones, and even luck. . The first life: He longed for the fairy mountain across the sea of clouds, looked at the peach blossoms in front of the steps, and sighed that it would be difficult to enter the fairy gate in this life. Second life: He stumbled on the road with false spiritual roots, approaching the abyss step by step. The fire in his heart died before it was extinguished, but his remaining obsession turned into the wind. The third life: He competes with other heroes with his middle-class and superior talents. He fights to cross the road to heaven on a bloody journey. His bones are broken and he only goes to the top of the clouds. The fourth life: He walked on the old path again as a genius, pointing his sword in the direction, everyone bowed their heads, and his reputation spread all over the world. The fifth generation:...... ............ A hundred generations later, Yu Yan looked back and saw immortals lining the ladder to heaven, but he lowered his head and bowed his eyebrows in worship. He looked at the immortal's face, which finally became his own. The path to immortality, reincarnation for hundreds of lives, the path to immortality will eventually be achieved. This is the Immortal Lord who will reincarnate for a hundred generations!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 2d ago
The second life has always emphasized the five spiritual roots of the protagonist, and everyone is either a pity or a cynic. I'm just confused. How much better are the four spiritual roots than the five spiritual roots? Those who don't know a hundred arts don't have as many cultivation resources as the protagonist. How come the author writes that the protagonist has such five spiritual roots that he can just give up cultivating immortality? Anyone with a little bit of logic knows that the Qi refining period is a stage where you can make progress by spending resources. Wulinggen just spends more Comparing the three and four spiritual roots, can they build the foundation? Foundation building pills are provided to geniuses with dual spiritual roots and above. Those with three or four spiritual roots who do not know how to earn resources through various arts will sooner or later be overtaken by cultivators with five spiritual roots and hundreds of arts. There is no hope of building a foundation anyway. I really can't stand the emphasis in the article on the protagonist's trashy five spiritual roots.
Not bad, I see it suits my taste so far
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 2d ago
The second life has always emphasized the five spiritual roots of the protagonist, and everyone is either a pity or a cynic. I'm just confused. How much better are the four spiritual roots than the five spiritual roots? Those who don't know a hundred arts don't have as many cultivation resources as the protagonist. How come the author writes that the protagonist has such five spiritual roots that he can just give up cultivating immortality? Anyone with a little bit of logic knows that the Qi refining period is a stage where you can make progress by spending resources. Wulinggen just spends more Comparing the three and four spiritual roots, can they build the foundation? Foundation building pills are provided to geniuses with dual spiritual roots and above. Those with three or four spiritual roots who do not know how to earn resources through various arts will sooner or later be overtaken by cultivators with five spiritual roots and hundreds of arts. There is no hope of building a foundation anyway. I really can't stand the emphasis in the article on the protagonist's trashy five spiritual roots.
Not bad, I see it suits my taste so far









