| Date | Group | Release |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c11 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c10 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c9 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c8 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c7 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c6 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c5 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c4 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c3 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c2 |
| 2026-05-29 | lightnovelasia | c1 |
It’s a solid start to what feels like a wild ride. The dad plot gives it an emotional weight most 'dungeon exploding' novels lack. The One Piece world is a fantastic playground with a built-in road map. The writing is flawed but energetic. I genuinely want to see Guan Yi navigate his father's betrayal and try to become a powerhouse. It's addictive, fast, and exactly what I was looking to burn an afternoon on.
'Don't call me 'sir'', 'within limits'. The military handler is a cool character already. He bluntly tells the female explorer to watch out for pirates. He gives the grim 'bad ending' warning without sugarcoating it. He's a professional. It makes the military feel like an actual dangerous organization with rules, even if their tactical analysis is complete garbage.
The nine year time loop in the Secret Realm is a fascinating cage. He has to spend nine full years in the One Piece world to 'clear' it. Every choice he makes matters for the next three months in reality. If he dies in the realm, he dies for real. The pressure of living a full lifetime in a fantasy world while knowing your real life mom is waiting for a phone call is heartbreakingly stressful.
So the 'Secret Realm Changes Fate' plan works by using a 'Supporting Secret Realm' to conquer a 'Target Secret Realm'. What if the One Piece world is the *supporting* realm? What if conquering it lets him take Devil Fruits or Haki back to the real world to fight his dad? The 'Project Vision: To be unlocked' implies the real target is something much bigger. His final fight is probably not in the East Blue.
The book is heavily structured around Chinese webnovel conventions. The 'face' system (hiding the situation from the mom), the 'generation' system (Teacher Liu's grandfather fought the demons), the 'system' as a document. A pure Western audience might find the dialogue a bit unnatural or the societal structure weird, but if you are familiar with xianxia or LitRPG clones, this is home turf.
Zero fluff. 18 years of background covered in a sentence. The letter is found instantly. The decision is made instantly. The plot moves. It respects the reader's intelligence and time. If a scene doesn't serve the plot, it gets cut. This is the hallmark of a good pulp webnovel. You get to the 'good part' (entering the dungeon) very, very quickly.