This is a world ruled entirely by sorcerers. Robb, born with weak spiritual aptitude, is dragged into the Black Mist Jungle. His guide sneers as he delivers the verdict: “Fail the trial within a year, and I’ll personally dissect your brain.”
On the brink of despair, something awakens deep within Robb’s consciousness—a mysterious class change panel:
[Necromancer]→ Forge a Soul Vessel→ [Undying]
[Solar Knight]→ [Temper your body within a star]→ [Radiant Sovereign]
[Timewarden]→ [Capture a Temporal Paradox]→ [Sovereign of Antiquity]
Amid a tide of chaos where sorcery clashes with divinity, Robb aspires to ascend and become the strongest of them all!
[From my reader, Thesaurus Rex on Royal Road] Style: Clear, fast-paced, and immersive. The author writes with confidence, blending crunchy LitRPG elements with vivid fantasy without bogging the reader down. Exposition is handled well, and big moments hit hard. There's a cinematic quality to action scenes and class evolution sequences. Sometimes descriptions lean generic, but never to the point of confusion. Story: The plot starts strong and stays compelling. Robb’s situation is desperate, the world is hostile, and the power system gives real room for creative progression. The overarching mystery (what is this system, why him, what is this world) develops in layers, with steady reveals that feel earned. Stakes go from personal to cosmic without losing the thread. Grammar: Very clean. Up to chapter 70, there are no major grammar or formatting issues. Dialogue flows well, and tense, punctuation, and structure are all consistent. A few stylistic hiccups here and there, but nothing immersion-breaking. Professional-level polish for a web serial. Character: Robb is likable and smart, and he avoids the usual Isekai pitfalls. No edgy loner routine, no clueless idiot moves. His growth feels earned. Side characters are hit-or-miss early on (some are more functional than fully fleshed), but the mentor arcs and rivalries start adding layers by chapter 50+. Emotional stakes are growing steadily with the power level. Overall: This is a sharp, engaging LitRPG that knows what it's doing. Robb’s infinite-class system opens the door to wild, unexpected power paths but it’s handled with a good mix of logic and creativity. There's no “system ex machina”, you watch him earn each upgrade. The world is brutal and strange, and the writing keeps things grounded even as the scale escalates to star-breaking, law-crushing insanity. If you like progression fantasy where the system respects your intelligence, this is worth your time. And if you’re into Isekai without the baggage of constant info-dumping or over-personal drama tied to every skill, you’ll probably binge this one fast.