
After Getting A Job in the Nether World, I Became Famous
- Genre: Other
- Author: Marshmallow Bunny,拉棉花糖的兔子
- Status: Completed
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Acting Adapted to Drama CD Black Belly Calm Protagonist Caring Protagonist Cohabitation Cold Love Interests Comedic Undertone Cute Protagonist Dishonest Protagonist Doting Love Interests Feng Shui Ghosts Handsome Male Lead Love at First Sight Love Interest Falls in Love First Loyal Subordinates Modern Day Pets Power Couple
Rating(3.8 / 5.0, 9 votes)
5 stars
2(22%)
4 stars
3(33%)
3 stars
4(44%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)

Popular Reviews
I'm so glad I started reading it at a point where our main characters (MC and ML) are already together, though their relationship is still in its early stages.
What I truly love about this novel is how it blends comedy and adventure without delving into actual horror, despite the supernatural elements and ghosts involved.
Our couple isn't exactly a power couple or a smart couple, but they work well together and have won many challenges. The MC tends to act fierce when working as Impermanence, while maintaining a calm demeanor as an actor and in his human form. The ML, on the other hand, is calm, unafraid, and always ready to support the MC.
They don’t possess superpowers or anything of that sort. However, the ML’s calmness and protective aura, combined with the MC’s reputation and status in the underworld, along with their allies, enable them to overcome any obstacles they face.
, it’s a fun and light-hearted novel with plenty of adventure, free from actual horror and gore. It’s truly engaging and exciting! I highly recommend giving it a read!
I hope the rest of the story remains just as good and satisfying until the very end! 🙏🙏🙏
Sometimes, I feel like the plot is a bit too convenient, with emotions and ghost encounters happening at just the right moments. But honestly, who cares? It’s the beginning, and “suddenly” has to come from somewhere.
While the planning might not be perfect, the writing itself is superb and feels natural. I’m excited to dive deeper into the character interactions and the truly unique developments. There’s nothing quite like it, though it can obviously be compared to several works in different ways. Ugh, but I don’t see anything cliché at all...
.............................. Well, I mean..... but you know.... You know.
F*ck, I might just MTL it.
To be honest, I found the entertainment side to be really perfunctory and underdeveloped. By the end, it felt like a burden the author was reluctantly dragging along, only used for gags. There's no exploration of Lan He's acting career, why he became interested in acting, a sense of balancing his part-time work with his main job, and even the gimmick of being able to feel the raw emotions of ghosts to enhance his acting abilities was only mentioned twice and then completely abandoned. None of his movies were given any real plots, and all chapters about him on set and filming were mostly just to introduce new supernatural cases.
Although I still give this five stars, the entertainment/acting aspect of this novel was really poor. However, the mystery-solving cases, the author's clear interest in and dedication to properly explaining Taoism and Buddhism, and the diverse ghost and spirit characters are all really engaging and well-written. The romance is also relaxed and low-key, which is exactly the type I prefer—no domineering, cringe-inducingly jealous male lead. In the end, I still recommend it.
The stories are really comedic and fun! I hope they get translated soon. I'm eager to read them!
The author has significantly improved in weaving hints into the story and the broader implications behind the protagonist's job. Readers of *Part-Time Taoist Priest* (if the links ever come back) will remember that there was already a side character who worked as a living psychopomp (走无常), and in *Those Years I Operated a Zoo*, one of the famous members of Hell (Diting) was mentioned. In this story, the entire background of the Hell bureaucracy is meticulously outlined to align with established religions (Taoist and Buddhist aspects) and syncretic beliefs (spirits, demons, foxes, etc.).
Death is a central theme, but most of the details are enriched with Chinese metaphysical beliefs about afterlife bureaucracy—our main character (MC) starts off because the Hell bureaucracy conscripted him into the living psychopomp business, where he meets the male lead (ML) whose soul left his body due to metaphysical reasons.
**Spoiler**
And in the end, the final boss turns out to be a deity, and the MC, in overthrowing the boss, becomes a living City God. This is a clever twist on the traditional Heaven/Hell dichotomy and highlights that, regardless of time or place, the nature of sentient beings remains remarkably consistent.
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