
Mortal's Legend of the Golden Crow
About This Novel
The story of being reborn in the mortal world, where flames can burn everything, and transforming into a golden crow.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(44)Scraped 6d ago
I have never read The Legend of Mortal Cultivation. Why is there a famous scene where Han Li gives way to Zhu? It is obvious that the protagonist knows the novel and deliberately says that he does not know, so he pretends not to know the plot. This kind of novel is the most ugly. It is better to write about indigenous people and not have anything to do with Han Li.
I just read two chapters. The fighting scenes in the first chapter are written like those in martial arts novels. In the second chapter, the author regards Dayan Jue as a hidden cultivation technique.
When I read Yuan Yao's story, I knew it was not a biography of mortals cultivating immortality, but a history of urban struggle.
Heavenly spirits and supernatural spirits with no background are actually very dangerous. They have only been alive for a few years and they are kind enough to teach you. If they don't plot against your body, you will die if you don't take the body. If you take the body, you will live for hundreds of years.
. .
Without the resources of the little green bottle, it would be difficult to soar.
I think it's okay. I don't know what the back is but the front is pretty good.
I saw the free f place and thought it was okay.
This book starts from Chaotic Star Sea. The protagonist himself is very talented, but there are too few details. Others are pretty good.
Elder Xinggong recruits you, but you actually dare to refuse. I'm really speechless. Wen Tianren, who is in the late stage of pill formation, recruits Han Li, the same level. If Han Li refuses, he will die, let alone a Yuanying boss.
Isn't the protagonist a time traveler? It feels like nothing is clear,
Author, does the outline write about the spiritual world or the fairy world? Or see if it can be popular? Just keep writing?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(44)Scraped 6d ago
I have never read The Legend of Mortal Cultivation. Why is there a famous scene where Han Li gives way to Zhu? It is obvious that the protagonist knows the novel and deliberately says that he does not know, so he pretends not to know the plot. This kind of novel is the most ugly. It is better to write about indigenous people and not have anything to do with Han Li.
I just read two chapters. The fighting scenes in the first chapter are written like those in martial arts novels. In the second chapter, the author regards Dayan Jue as a hidden cultivation technique.
When I read Yuan Yao's story, I knew it was not a biography of mortals cultivating immortality, but a history of urban struggle.
Heavenly spirits and supernatural spirits with no background are actually very dangerous. They have only been alive for a few years and they are kind enough to teach you. If they don't plot against your body, you will die if you don't take the body. If you take the body, you will live for hundreds of years.
. .
Without the resources of the little green bottle, it would be difficult to soar.
I think it's okay. I don't know what the back is but the front is pretty good.
I saw the free f place and thought it was okay.
This book starts from Chaotic Star Sea. The protagonist himself is very talented, but there are too few details. Others are pretty good.
Elder Xinggong recruits you, but you actually dare to refuse. I'm really speechless. Wen Tianren, who is in the late stage of pill formation, recruits Han Li, the same level. If Han Li refuses, he will die, let alone a Yuanying boss.
Isn't the protagonist a time traveler? It feels like nothing is clear,
Author, does the outline write about the spiritual world or the fairy world? Or see if it can be popular? Just keep writing?









