Summary

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Du Yu, a 26-year-old state-owned enterprise worker, dies when a runaway truck crashes into the bus he is riding, killing him instantly while everyone else remains unharmed. His soul floats outside his body, confused and alone. Two women in black and white work uniforms arrive in a battered flying minivan—Xie Jin of the Xie family and Fan Xiaoguo of the Fan family, the Black and White Impermanence. They are underworld officials tasked with collecting souls. They explain that Du Yu’s death was actually a wrongful death: the person destined to die was a serial killer named Zhou Zhuangshi, who should have accepted Du Yu’s offered seat but instead moved to the back of the bus to follow a woman who, according to records, should not have been there. Because of this anomaly, Du Yu died in his place. As a wrongful death victim, Du Yu is entitled to two welfare policies: choose reincarnation into a rich or celebrity family, or apply to become an underworld or daytime official.Du Yu chooses reincarnation as a rich second generation, believing he still has attachments to the mortal world. They drive through the air to Fengdu City, crossing the Ghost Gate of the Underworld, a vast ancient city surrounded by the River of Forgetfulness. Minivans like theirs fill the sky, each carrying a pair of Black and White Impermanence. At the gate, they encounter a rude judge in a wine-red robe who claims the wrongful death quota is full and tries to classify Du Yu as an accidental death. Before they can argue, a white-robed scholar appears, holding a large talisman-covered brush. He slaps the judge and declares that wrongful death is wrongful death, and that the Legend Management Bureau has never been abandoned. This is Cui Jue, head of the Four Great Judges and the Civil Judge, manager of the Department of Yin Law.Cui Jue examines Du Yu and becomes strangely agitated. He feels a surge of unfamiliar memories upon seeing Du Yu—something about the nineteenth year of Zhenguan—which puzzles him. He tells Du Yu that reincarnation as a rich second generation would require a wait of 726 years. Then he offers Du Yu a deal: perform a dangerous task for him, and he will use all his connections to drastically shorten that waiting time. Despite Cui Jue’s warning that the task is extremely dangerous and could lead to the death of the living and dispersal of the dead, Du Yu agrees, hoping to return to the human world sooner.Cui Jue orders Xie Jin and Fan Xiaoguo to take Du Yu to a mountain forty li west of the Ghost Gate, known as Yin Mountain or Mount Unreturn, half green and half black. At its foot is a house that serves as the Legend Management Bureau’s underworld liaison office. On the way, Xie Jin receives a phone call from her ancestor Xie Bi’an, the legendary White Impermanence known as Seventh Master. As soon as Xie Bi’an learns Du Yu’s name, he appears in person out of a spatial distortion, still wearing cucumber slices on his face for a facial mask. He stares at Du Yu for a long time, then laughs wildly, exclaiming “Brilliant, Cui Jue, brilliant!” before disappearing again, leaving everyone baffled.The three arrive at the dilapidated cement house at the foot of Mount Unreturn. They find a sign covered in vines reading “Legend Management Bureau, Underworld Liaison Office.” The story concludes with Du Yu standing at this threshold, having committed to a dangerous unknown mission, observed by powerful figures who seem to recognize something in him that even he does not understand.

Associated Names

传说管理局
Latest Release
DateGroupRelease
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c59
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c58
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c57
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Overall, this first chapter is a masterclass in setting up a web novel. It hooks you with a funny premise, introduces charming characters, builds a fascinating world through comedy, and sets up a deep, ancient mystery. The prose is clean and funny. The pacing is relentless. The character voices are distinct. It feels like the start of a very long, very fun ride. It understands its genre perfectly: it’s comedic, it’s fast, it’s full of potential for adventure, and it leaves you wanting more. I’m definitely adding this to my reading list. The voice is just so fresh and unique.

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The final image of the "Legend Management Bureau" sign is a perfect cliffhanger. It's not a big explosion or a fight. It's just a sign. But it's the sign of the thing that Cui Jue mentioned. It's the physical proof of the mystery. It turns the abstract idea of "an abandoned bureau" into a physical location Du Yu is now standing in front of. It’s a quiet, creepy, and exciting way to end the first chapter. The adventure is about to start, and it all begins in this rundown shack at the foot of a spooky mountain. I'm ready to see what's inside.

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The phrase "Tai Shu" (泰叔) is left untranslated, which is a bit of a puzzle. Is it a person? A demon? A natural law? The way the red-robed judge says "The Legend Management Bureau has been abandoned for nearly a thousand years. Haven't you seen enough Tai Shu?" implies it's a common phenomenon in this world, like a recurring glitch in reality. It's obviously linked to the central mystery. I'm excited to learn what it is. Leaving it untranslated adds a little bit of mystery and encourages the reader to look it up or figure it out from context, which is a smart writing trick.

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I love the little details about the car. The sticker that says "Please take care of your belongings." The fact that they have to circle for ten minutes looking for a parking spot. It grounds this epic, mythological setting in such small, petty concerns. It's a constant reminder that the supernatural is just another job for these people. They have to deal with traffic, bad parking, and annoying bosses. This blend of the profound and the mundane is the book's greatest strength. It makes the world feel lived-in and hilarious, preventing the story from ever feeling too heavy or pretentious.

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Du Yu's decision to choose reincarnation as a rich second-generation is so understandable. He had a boring, poor life. Of course he wants to try the easy path. It's a very human and selfish desire. It makes his ultimate choice to accept the dangerous mission from Cui Jue a real sacrifice. He's giving up his guaranteed (if massively delayed) dream for a chance at a quick reward and a mystery. It shows a hint of ambition that he probably never had in life. This core conflict – the safe but slow path versus the risky but fast one – is a great foundation for his character arc.

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The visual of the city in the underworld is stunning: "an enormous ancient city stood majestically underground... filled with ghostly fires, and the lights of countless homes were a faint green glow." It’s a classic but effective description. It uses familiar imagery (an ancient city, a green river) but places it in a totally new context. The "Ghost Gate" being hundreds of meters high gives it a sense of scale that feels both ancient and alien. These descriptions aren't long or poetic, but they are effective. They create a strong sense of place in just a few sentences, which is crucial for a fast-paced story.

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