At long last, Meng Hao had achieved the goal he had set for himself all those years before, when he first embarked on the path of cultivation. He had become an Immortal, a true Immortal, and one who smashed through the Door of Immortality with an unprecedented, unbelievable 123 Immortal meridians. He had seized his destiny, and now stood amongst some of the most talented experts of the Ninth Mountain. All knew his name, and knew that the legendary Fang clan, the clan of Meng Hao's father, had risen to pre-eminence in the Ninth Mountain and Sea once more. Even the Supreme Paragon Seadream was taking note of him.
But this was not enough. Not yet, not by far. He wasn't even close to fully mastering the secrets of the League of Demon Sealers, and it meant nothing that he stood amongst the apex of the Ninth Mountain - for what of the other eight? This was his Mountain and Sea Realm, and all of Heaven's light would shine upon Meng Hao and his loved ones as he begins to claim what is his - whether Heaven liked it or not!
Born in Heilongjiang Province, Mudanjiang prefecture city.
Er Gen is a platinum author on Qidian who used his love for classical chinese myths as a foundation on which to build his webnovels. He has become a pillar of the xianxia genre, and his flagship novel, Renegade Immortal, placed within the top ranks of Qidian’s monthly recommendation charts for many months.
the whole grand war of the worlds which is suppose to be the climax of the book dragged on and on and on... er gen does not know how to edit himself. it's like he just puked a bunch of words on paper for the sake of meeting chapter word counts. what was suppose to be exciting and intense just felt boring and bland. i forwarded several times out of boredom.
This story continues to amaze me with the depth of insight and creativity. Obviously the cultivation/power ups get repetitive but each one has its own twist and with the stakes gradually increasing at each interval I am still left entertained! Reading the next book immediately.
This is pretty much fantastic. Can't think of any other words to describe this book. To me this was the best book of the series thus far, plus it ended in a way that I could accept as the end of the series, so I have great hopes for the next book. If you like animes, manga and oriental culture, then give this chinese xianxia a shot, it is one of the best things I ever read
This book has two major flaws that previous ones did not: Long, boring, clinical battles, and a lack of justification and threshold for getting stronger.
Boring fights: This book follows through on the concept of war. There is a lot of fighting. In previous books, each battle would be under a chapter, and conclude relatively quickly (book 5 is the exception, to it's detriment). Here, the book will introduce a new enemy general that you don't care about and then spend 5 chapters detailing a boring battle. I'm talking 'laundry list of move names' boring. Even young adult stuff like ranger's apprentice is better at describing battles. The battles are "A did this. B was in a bad spot. B did this. The tables have turned!" rinse and repeat. I don't even care about these new characters, so why do I need to read 5 chapters about them? (The author was exceeding their quota for chapters by 5x on some days in an attempt to get more tickets, which I'm pretty sure equate to reputation or profit or some such benefit.)
Lack of reader investment: In order to have satisfying progression you need purpose and scale. You need a good purpose for getting stronger so that the reader will care and feel good in interested while they read about the mc powering up. You need a scale+goal for the powering up so that the reader can measure how much progress the mc has made toward achieving their purpose, that way the reader can tell that the mc is getting closer to fulfilling their purpose. Here the purpose is decent. There is a big war. However, the scale is nonexistent. We don't know how strong the main character needs to get to win, and random stronger enemies keep popping up a-la-dbz. That means that we can't tell whether the main character is making significant progress toward achieving anything, so we feel like the story is aimless. I don't read about a dude pushing a boulder up a hill for all eternity because although there is motion, there is no progress. Similarly, we are unable to measure progress here.
I was disappointed by this one. It seemed like there were literally hundreds of abilities and powers that appeared without any foreshadowing or antecedents. Sue, that's creative, but it's not very satisfying. What should have been a gradual swelling into a crescendo of violence in the war of the heavens... was instead the chaotic noise of a drum-kit falling down the stairs.
Starts off a bit slow, but still decent..and then books 3-9 are absolutely phenomenal. I wasn' a fan of Book 10 as it suffers from the tepid melancholic finish typical of Er Gen books, but still one of the best in the genre.
Deathblade does a stellar job with the English tranlation too!
Words can't describe this masterpiece. This story is truly splendind in every single sense whatsoever. This story will make you laugh your ass off, will make you emotional, will make you pumped up and will make you cry. You're in a for one hell of an emotional trip.
Loved the entire series! Anyone who is looking for a good story with plenty of character development and really good plot, I'd say this series is really good! Love Er Gen for the great time I had reading the series and for Death Blade for translating this series to English.
This book series has probably won the highest word counts that I've ever read in a series. I haven't got to read The wheel of Time yet but I have to wonder which is larger. This cultivation fantasy series does tend to go on for a bit at times but will pull you through chapter by chapter. This series is full of repetitiveness in terms of plot arcs action scenes cultivation development reactions themes and so on. However it is still interesting and will provide you if you enjoy the genre at least hours of entertainment.
As the 8th book in the series the author has done a fairly good job at juggling a vast amount of information. There are a few times in which it feels he drops the ball. Many of these things will not quite be noticeable unless you're binging through the entire series. This series has been known to have a time jump within a a paragraph that could be decades or even a hundred years. It's only happened a few times and for the most part the author has kept track of this. However in this last book as well as the previous one there were no massive time jumps. The character left his home after visiting his friends and spent about a decade or so through the next two books only to return home as if generations had passed. In a sense that was how the author was portraying it it didn't quite make sense. I think this is part of where the author is trying to give significance to something by increasing the value of its age when it really wasn't there. It's minor but it's sort of nagging me simply because it's a puzzle piece that doesn't fit the story.
Truthfully though the author is juggling a massive amount of information and has been keeping it going. As for us readers it is difficult to keep up with the names at times when they're thrown at us in massive amounts but the author makes characters unique and recognizable to the point that even with the unique names the signatures that they have when they show up tend to immediately connect back to the past stories.
There's a lot of action and this is not quite a series or stories that have consistent beginning middles and ends. Most of the time the story is so large that you can have a few different climaxes to plot arts throughout the entire story. And while there is sometimes a slight overarching plot it is mostly the overarching part of a series rather than an overarching plot for a book. Nonetheless it is very entertaining if you enjoy the style.
The language in the book sometimes gets fairly crass to the point where I would say it definitely is a series that is for young adults and above. While there is nothing explicit within the series I still think it's inappropriate for children. The action is fun if a bit repetitive at times.
This is a copypasted review that regards the entire series. Be warned, because I Shall Seal the heavens is millions of words long, approximately 4 times the length of the Bible. The story of I Shall Seal the Heavens is crazy to those unfamiliar with the magic systems this genre uses.
It's pretty good. I give it a pass. Some parts toward the end involving The Big Bad Guy of the series are really weird, but everything else is great and I read through it just fine. Not much I can say about a 3-million-word-long story that I read several years ago.