A car accident causes Yan Chuang to traverse into a martial arts world resembling ancient times, bringing along a 'Purple Mist Palace'.
Teaching by Example (Level 1): Your explanations will increase listeners' comprehension efficiency by 50%, and their understanding and thoughts will feed back to you, granting you corresponding 'insights'.
The Great Dao Cushions (Level 1): The Purple Mist Palace contains six Great Dao cushions that aid listeners in better understanding explanations and grasping the Great Dao. The effect of 'Teaching by Example' is increased by 1000%. Note: Only two of the six seats can be changed once.
Treasure Nurturing Rock (Level 1): You can use 'spirituality' to enhance and nurture items.
Method Development (Level 1): You can set up research tasks, gain inspiration, develop martial arts, and complete tasks to gain 'insights' and 'spirituality'. Currently, you can create 2 tasks.
Upon reaching the other shore, Yan Chuang laughed and said, "I didn't specifically study martial arts, those were merely insights gained while preaching to disciples."
Honestly, the idea is great, and it was pretty fun at first. However, the explanations of martial arts are so excessive that they start to feel like nonsense. Some chapters are 70–80% just martial arts explanations, which feels unnecessary. If the author actually has real martial arts experience and is applying it here, then I apologize for being disrespectful—but honestly, it's just too much. I do like it, but I just can't power through and can only read the free chapters. Unlocking the paid ones doesn't feel worth it when so much of the content is stuff I'd end up skimming.
While I like wuxia, this book explains techniques a bit too much. But I am only at 41.
I have to say, quite contrary to the other two, I immensely enjoy the slightly excessive amount of martial arts explanations as it adds a bit of depth to it, though I understand the pain that the wallet might suffer.
are you sure this is xianxia because it feels more like wuxia
The concept is great. I like the teaching and technique design aspect of it. The problem is everything else. The world building, story development and character motivations are erratic at best. Not to mention, 90% of the novel is word padding instead of actual content..
if you like to read word vomit this is definitely the novel for you as the the author's greatest capability is clearly hitting their word count. unfortunately they fail to do so in an interesting or entertaining way. additionally while there is potential in the story you need to crawl through so much random jargon about how each and every stance is performed that you can forget what the point of the last 3 paragraphs were before you finish reading the hard, soft, up, down form focus tai-chi wannabe explanation.