Summary

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Chu Liang died from overwork and reincarnated in a world of martial arts and demons, growing up as an orphan hunter in Qing Shi Village. After saving children from a bear, he was severely injured, and his relatives, except for Second Uncle, plotted for his property. His past life memories awakened along with the Evolutionary Appraisal Mirror, a bronze artifact that could evolve objects by consuming flesh and blood. He evolved Bruise Powder into Healing Balm, healing his wounds. He found a damaged martial arts manual that required twenty jin of flesh to evolve. That night, Third Uncle attempted to kill him but was killed by Chu Liang, who used Corpse Melting Liquid from vinegar to dispose of the body. Zhao Hu visited and tested him, but Chu Liang hid his recovery. A large bear attacked, and Master Hu killed it with one palm. Third Uncle's disappearance caused concern. Chu Liang decided to practice martial arts by evolving the manual and starting training in secret.

Associated Names

长生修仙,我把武道进化为仙道
Latest Release
DateGroupRelease
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c404
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c403
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c402
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c401
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c400
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c399
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c398
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c397
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c396
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2026-05-29lightnovelasia c394
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c393

Community Reviews

Rating(3.8 / 5.0, 31votes)
5 stars
5(16%)
4 stars
14(45%)
3 stars
12(39%)
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Overall, the strongest aspect of this story is the tension between Chu Liang's resourcefulness and his vulnerability. He has a cheat system, but it costs resources he doesn't have yet. He killed one threat but attracted more attention. The pacing balances action with quiet moments of planning. If the author maintains this tone of calculated survival rather than power fantasy, this could be a standout cultivation novel. I'd keep reading.
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The ending of this excerpt leaves things on a tense note. Third Uncle is dead and disposed of, but Chu Liang isn't safe yet. Zhao Hu is suspicious, the relatives are greedy, and another bear attacked the village. The Chekhov's gun of the corpse melting liquid has been fired, but the martial arts manual hasn't been fully explored. I'm invested in seeing how Chu Liang navigates these threats while building toward becoming a martial artist. Good setup all around.
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I'm bracing for Zhao Hu to be a bigger problem. He's gathering information about Chu Liang's condition, and he has a crew. The moment Chu Liang's injury is exposed, Zhao Hu might move to take his hunting equipment or even his house. The interpersonal conflict adds layers beyond just survival. This village is small but politically complex.
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The night scene where Chu Liang explores his kitchen with the appraisal function was fun. It's basically a shopping trip for a gamer with a new UI. The fact that he checked everything from spoons to salt to vinegar shows he's thorough. The revelation that coarse salt can become refined salt hints at economic potential—trade goods could be a side hustle.
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Chu Liang's realization that he can't enhance himself but can enhance everything around him is a clever narrative constraint. It forces him to be resourceful and prevents the story from becoming a simple stat-grind. The wooden fork-to-steel fork upgrade is minor but shows potential. A steel fork is a better weapon than nothing, and it only cost five jin of meat. Pragmatic upgrades.
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Master Hu's introduction as a one-palm bear killer immediately establishes the power ceiling. The villagers fear him almost as much as they respect him. When they say "A-Liang wouldn't take our land," it highlights how even the village's protector is also its oppressor. That moral gray area makes the world feel lived-in, not just a backdrop for the MC.
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