Summary

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In 2012, Wu An, a university dropout expelled for fighting, returns to his small fishing village and becomes a delinquent. He smokes, drinks, steals, and fights, bringing shame to his father, a village cadre. One day, he steals a sea bass from two fishermen, Lin Bin and Lin Hu. While running away on a rocky beach, he slips and falls, hitting his head. The fishermen think he is dead and flee. Wu An survives but finds himself reborn to that exact moment. Memories of his past life flood in: after this fall, he was hospitalized and became a village joke, then left home to wander, working dead-end jobs. His father disowned him via the village loudspeaker after he beat up his ex-girlfriend's new lover and borrowed ten thousand yuan from a loan shark for compensation. His father later died of illness while Wu An was too far to return. His brother cut ties. Now with a second chance, he resolves to change.

He discovers a Luck Value system. The system shows his Luck Value as 11, with a daily luck pool of 10. By expending luck points, he can add buffs to tools, enhancing their performance. It tells him that hard work increases luck. He tests it on an old manual water pump, adding two points, and the pump works immediately. Luck decreases with use and resets based on his daily actions. He understands that if he works diligently, his luck will grow.

His friend A Qing, a short, dark, slow-witted young man who has been his loyal sidekick, finds him. A Qing offers him cigarette butts hidden under the mattress. Wu An refuses, feeling ashamed. A Qing brings pickled vegetables, dried kelp, and rice. Wu An cooks a meal with the stolen fish, showing culinary skills from his past life struggling. He tells A Qing he wants to make money legitimately. A Qing is confused but supports him.

To earn his first capital, Wu An decides to fish. He and A Qing encounter Lin Bin and Lin Hu, who are relieved he is alive but mock him, bringing up the loudspeaker announcement. Wu An uses their words against them, saying he wants to reform and asks for their support by lending him fishing rods. Trapped, they lend their worst rods along with bait and a landing net, under the condition that if he fails to catch anything in an hour, he must return them. They follow to the rocky beach to watch.

Wu An and A Qing fish without success initially. Lin Bin and Lin Hu catch a couple of small fish and taunt them. A Qing suggests running away with the gear to sell it, but Wu An refuses. He then uses the system, adding three luck points to his fishing rod, the maximum for that rod. The system states that with the buff, he will definitely catch seafood under ten catties. Moments later, the rod bends. Wu An pulls in a large sea bass, bigger than Lin Bin's. A Qing cheers. He catches another quickly, and then another. Lin Bin and Lin Hu watch in disbelief. Wu An continues to catch fish, each time hauling in a decent catch. The luck buff works perfectly.

With these catches, Wu An feels confident. He plans to sell the fish to repay the loan shark and start a new life. He is determined to work hard every day, knowing that the system rewards effort. His ultimate goal is to reconcile with his father and brother and become a responsible member of the village. The story captures the beginning of his journey, as he walks away from the beach with his catch, starting his transformation from a good-for-nothing to a hardworking man.

Associated Names

赶海:我靠无敌运气,承包整个大海
Latest Release
DateGroupRelease
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c82
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c81
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c80
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c79
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c78
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c77
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c76
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c75
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c74
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c73
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c72
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c71

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I honestly wasn’t expecting much when I started reading—the whole “reborn after a fall while stealing fish” premise sounds like pure comedy gold, and honestly it kind of is. But I gotta say, Wu An’s immediate thought process feels way too real. He doesn’t instantly turn into a genius; he’s just relieved to be alive and vaguely determined not to screw up this time. That raw, awkward sense of regret mixed with hope clicked for me. The tone is self-deprecating without being whiny. Plus the way his first big goal is literally “go home for dinner” instead of some grand scheme feels grounded. Yeah, it’s a web novel, but not every story needs to start with an empire.
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The whole fish-stealing opening had me both cringing and laughing. That visual of a guy in flip-flops running full tilt then face-planting on rocks is like watching a blooper reel. And the fishermen thinking he died? Straight out of a dark comedy. But then Wu An just sits up, blood all over, and casually borrows fishing rods from the dudes who left him for dead—that’s some serious nerve and I respect it. The way he uses their guilt to get gear is petty and hilarious. He’s not some saint after rebirth, he’s still a schemer but now with direction. That shift from pathetic to playfully manipulative feels earned.
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I’m kind of shocked by how much I like A Qing already. The guy is written as the classic simpleminded sidekick, but there’s something endearing about his loyalty. When he pulls out cigarette butts from under the mattress like it’s treasure and offers the best ones to Wu An first? That’s friendship right there. He’s not smart, he’s not rich, but he’s all in. And for a protagonist who just came from a life where everyone eventually abandoned him, having someone that unconditionally sticks around is huge. I hope the author doesn’t make him a tool or comic relief—he deserves real development too.
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The system’s pretty basic but I don’t hate it. It’s not one of those overcomplicated ones where you need a spreadsheet to understand the stats. Luck-based, tied to tools, and directly influenced by work ethic? That’s a neat thematic fit for a guy trying to turn his life around. The whole “hard work makes you lucky” angle is cheesy but honestly refreshing compared to the usual “kill monsters, get stats.” Plus the manual water pump bit was a fun, low-stakes test run. I can already tell the system won’t solve everything—it’s just a push. And Wu An still has to figure out the rest on his own.
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Wait so the main character just straight up borrowed fishing gear by basically guilt-tripping two guys who watched him “die?” That’s genius level pettiness and I’m here for it. Lin Bin and Lin Hu got completely outplayed and they probably don’t even realize how much. The whole moral kidnapping thing— “if you want me to be good, support me” —is such a ridiculous argument but it worked because those guys were so panicked. It shows Wu An is still smooth with words even when he’s down bad. The dialogue feels natural, not too forced, and the village rivalry dynamic is entertaining already.
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There’s this one detail that stuck with me: the old house. It’s basically just walls and a mattress, but Wu An mentions his brother and sister-in-law secretly cleaned it for him. That tiny gesture says so much. His family didn’t totally give up on him even when he was at his worst. It adds layers to his grief about his dad’s death in the previous timeline. The regret is real and the motivation to make amends feels earned because we see that the love was always there, just buried under disappointment. That’s good emotional groundwork for a redemption arc that doesn’t feel cheap.
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