This book is exactly the kind of book I've been enjoying reading recently. This is the story of Dorian, a being who has reached the pinnacle of cultivation (God king) and now entertains himself by "Speedrunning the Multiverse." This is where he reincarnates his soul in the body of someone right at the start of their cultivation journey, and tries to beat his best time of ascending back to the pinnacle.
So this is a fresh take on the reincarnated master trope, and I really enjoyed what it accomplishes here. The balance between good story, solid characters, wish fulfillment and plot progression was bang on here, and as a result this was a breeze to read.
That being said, I can understand why a lot of people have some issues with this book; mainly with the protagonist. On a surface level, he's a hard protagonist to like as he is outrageously self-centred, caring only for his latest run and nothing else. People are but tools on his path to ascendancy, and that's hard to stomach... Or it would have been if this book were not one of the best examples of showing rather than telling I have seen in some time.
Listening to the internal monologue of the main character and taking his words at face value, he is indeed a self-centred creature. However, when you take a look at his actions, I get the impression that he is not nearly as self-centred as it seems, and he is, in fact, just telling himself what he needs to hear to justify his actions. The best example of this is how he treats the sister of his reincarnated body in this book. At every step of the way, he talks about her like she is an asset to him, and he is just doing everything in his power to make her the best possible asset she can be. However, in every instance, he is actually taking the best action he can for her interests and rationalising it after the fact to keep up his pretence of cold detachment that I suspect he uses as a shield against the downsides of immortality: the loss of so many loved ones.
This is great character writing, telling us one thing and showing us another to create a truly intriguing main character who is three-dimensional, who cares far more than he lets on, and who has hidden depths we have yet to explore in this series.
The great character work doesn't stop with the protagonist. The cast of supporting characters are just as interesting and unique in their own way. Anyone who has read one of my reviews before knows the importance I place on good characters in a book, and therefore will not be surprised to find how much this pleased me in this novel.
So overall, this was a really solid opening book in the series, and I can't wait to get stuck in the sequel. If I had but one complaint here that I hope could be addressed in the future, it would be that I would like this run/incarnation to teach Dorian something about life so that he can grow as a character. Maybe it's to make him learn to care about the world again, or give him a reason to exist beyond speed running. Whatever the case, it would be nice if this incarnation had more meaning than just another speed run, and give us a reason of why this particular story had to be told.
It's a small niggle in an otherwise great book, so it's an easy 5-stars here. I recommend it to fans of overpowered protagonists, reincarnated masters, and progression fantasy.