
Cultivation of Immortality: Begin Liver Experience from Black Tiger Boxing
by Space Duke
About This Novel
Zhao Xuan traveled to the ancient world and became the son of a merchant. With the help of the proficiency panel, start by practicing Black Tiger Boxing, become stronger step by step, and follow the footsteps of immortal cultivators.
What Readers Think
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Official(15)Scraped 3d ago
The writing style feels a bit tender, the settings of the plug-ins are too vague, and the panel plug-ins and martial arts training are not very prominent. Basically, it relies on the protagonist to work hard and diligently, and practice to exhaustion every day. Medical skills are also vague. If you read a book, you can gain experience. But if you read a book over and over again, can you gain experience over and over again? In other words, if you read a lot of books on general medical skills, will the experience bonus be reduced? Can I upgrade my medical skills to a high level if I only study ordinary medical skills? For novels of this type of panel proficiency (non-point upgrade), the setting of the golden finger must be clearly written, so that readers will have a sense of immersion when reading it. Panel flow either ignores upgrade bottlenecks, allows unlimited upgrades (making something out of nothing), allows you to enter the panel after reading the cheats once, or integrates similar upgrades, etc. You must at least write down a clear direction. Similarly, if the author's original intention is not to make the plug-in too big, then it should be clearly stated early on that the function of the golden finger panel is to gain something for every sweat. It only serves to make the protagonist's practice more directional and work harder. Then don't write it. When studying medicine, you can gain experience regardless of whether you understand it or not. In the same way, when practicing martial arts, shouldn't you be able to gain experience by practicing casually? Also, the author repeatedly emphasizes how expensive martial arts training is at the beginning, but does not write out why the protagonist needs to eat ginseng to practice martial arts? What is the difference between practicing martial arts with and without ginseng? You can write that after taking the tonic, your body will recover quickly and you can practice boxing several times a day. Or taking tonics will increase the efficiency of martial arts training, and similarly, one punch can increase proficiency. But if you don't write it clearly and you only write about the cost of money, it seems a bit far-fetched! So I said that the author's writing style seems a bit immature!
"It's not necessarily the sun that hits her face in the morning." "It's not necessarily the arms that have bulging veins." "It wasn't necessarily a knife that stabbed her in the back." "Her difficulty breathing is not necessarily asthma." "The fever she has all over her body doesn't necessarily mean she has a high fever." "Her kneeling down is not necessarily asking for mercy."
It's average. The writing is okay.
Update Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry
The plot is good! The whole chapter is ordered
Come on! Keep up the good work! I'll comment and make suggestions when I have time, and I hope the author will adopt them when the time comes!
Read the catalog first and then the book, collect it first and then wait until Cultivation appears
It won't work until Chapter 22. There's no logic.
Not bad, not bad. Just got in the car.
It can be seen from the first chapter that the writing is too young and the connection is very stiff. In fact, there are some problems with the dialogue and should be modified. The dialogue feels very awkward and the method is too young.
Is it a feature or a special effect? I can't figure it out.
I remember it was 1,000 taels, right? Author
Rating
Community(0)
Official(15)Scraped 3d ago
The writing style feels a bit tender, the settings of the plug-ins are too vague, and the panel plug-ins and martial arts training are not very prominent. Basically, it relies on the protagonist to work hard and diligently, and practice to exhaustion every day. Medical skills are also vague. If you read a book, you can gain experience. But if you read a book over and over again, can you gain experience over and over again? In other words, if you read a lot of books on general medical skills, will the experience bonus be reduced? Can I upgrade my medical skills to a high level if I only study ordinary medical skills? For novels of this type of panel proficiency (non-point upgrade), the setting of the golden finger must be clearly written, so that readers will have a sense of immersion when reading it. Panel flow either ignores upgrade bottlenecks, allows unlimited upgrades (making something out of nothing), allows you to enter the panel after reading the cheats once, or integrates similar upgrades, etc. You must at least write down a clear direction. Similarly, if the author's original intention is not to make the plug-in too big, then it should be clearly stated early on that the function of the golden finger panel is to gain something for every sweat. It only serves to make the protagonist's practice more directional and work harder. Then don't write it. When studying medicine, you can gain experience regardless of whether you understand it or not. In the same way, when practicing martial arts, shouldn't you be able to gain experience by practicing casually? Also, the author repeatedly emphasizes how expensive martial arts training is at the beginning, but does not write out why the protagonist needs to eat ginseng to practice martial arts? What is the difference between practicing martial arts with and without ginseng? You can write that after taking the tonic, your body will recover quickly and you can practice boxing several times a day. Or taking tonics will increase the efficiency of martial arts training, and similarly, one punch can increase proficiency. But if you don't write it clearly and you only write about the cost of money, it seems a bit far-fetched! So I said that the author's writing style seems a bit immature!
"It's not necessarily the sun that hits her face in the morning." "It's not necessarily the arms that have bulging veins." "It wasn't necessarily a knife that stabbed her in the back." "Her difficulty breathing is not necessarily asthma." "The fever she has all over her body doesn't necessarily mean she has a high fever." "Her kneeling down is not necessarily asking for mercy."
It's average. The writing is okay.
Update Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry Hurry
The plot is good! The whole chapter is ordered
Come on! Keep up the good work! I'll comment and make suggestions when I have time, and I hope the author will adopt them when the time comes!
Read the catalog first and then the book, collect it first and then wait until Cultivation appears
It won't work until Chapter 22. There's no logic.
Not bad, not bad. Just got in the car.
It can be seen from the first chapter that the writing is too young and the connection is very stiff. In fact, there are some problems with the dialogue and should be modified. The dialogue feels very awkward and the method is too young.
Is it a feature or a special effect? I can't figure it out.
I remember it was 1,000 taels, right? Author









