“Someone like you, working in an unstable job as an adventurer, wouldn’t be thinking about the future, right?”

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  1. DaoistDy6nnF8hd
    DaoistDy6nnF8hd rated it
    Everyone in this novel seems as dim-witted as bricks, and the world is completely nonsensical. The plot revolves around setting up cartoonishly evil villains who underestimate the main character (MC). However, the issue is that the MC is portrayed as the highest-ranking member of the adventure guild, so famous that every important person panics at the thought of offending him. Yet, despite his fame, no one actually knows him. It’s as if no one recognizes their country’s president because he occasionally uses a pseudonym.

    The villains are all flat, dull, and boring stereotypes who act like big shots just to set themselves up for a fall. Even though the MC does nothing, anyone who dares to be rude to him gets an entire chapter dedicated to how crossing him ruins their lives. A clerk at a shop is rude to him, and we get a chapter about how the clerk gets fired, can’t find work, ends up drunk and homeless, and is eventually used as a human experiment. A girl who bullied one of the characters in his entourage ends up dying as a junkie prostitute. There’s no subtlety; friends of the MC receive every imaginable blessing, while anyone else faces utter ruin. It’s as if being rude to this guy triggers the universe to intervene and destroy their lives for him.

    The MC himself is as dull as a bag of rocks. He’s rich, overpowered, and 40+ chapters in, he hasn’t done anything interesting. He’s only performed one action, and it wasn’t even a satisfying moment of dominance. Instead, we keep hearing about how great he is from people in other places, while those who directly interact with him treat him like garbage.
  1. LuohuodPd
    LuohuodPd rated it
    Do not recommend. I couldn't get past a few chapters without closing the book out of frustration. The main character (MC) is supposedly one of the most powerful people in the world, but he acts like a complete beta. He is often seen as weak, and almost no one recognizes his true power, not even his girlfriend of over five years, who thought he was just a low-ranking adventurer. Even guild employees, who should have had access to his information, didn't know who he was. Worst of all, despite numerous wrongs committed against him, he takes it all like a sniveling worm. When these injustices come to light, he insists on only light punishments, saying he doesn't want to cause them problems. If anyone else had faced such treatment, they would be crying tears of blood, yet he wants to let them off with just a slap on the wrist.
  1. AllObservingReader7r
    To me, it's just average. There are far better things to read out there.

    Additionally, the main character seems to appear in only about 50% of the chapters, if that. Much of the story revolves around the characters who interact with the main character rather than the MC themselves.

    Also, there's been very little harem development so far. I'm putting the book on hold for now; I might come back to it, or I might not.
  1. MAXandMILLS
    MAXandMILLS rated it
    Boring. If you have to read it, by the time you reach chapter 200, you'll notice that the arcs are longer but essentially repeat the same pattern. He primarily finds women, mentors them, and then the antagonist of the arc experiences regret. This has happened at least five times already, and due to the "flavor of the day" approach, it’s mostly telling with very little substantive content to show.
  1. DaoisthiEB5MDQT
    DaoisthiEB5MDQT rated it
    The synopsis section is as empty and uninformative as a typical Korean novel summary, making it clear that this is another clichéd modern-day dungeon novel. In a few chapters, literally everyone who wronged the protagonist gets their comeuppance. Spoiler:

    The guy who stole his ex-girlfriend gets a pay cut and is transferred to a less desirable branch location, based on what I could understand from the poor machine translation. His ex-girlfriend herself apparently dies, although the ending of that chapter was somewhat ambiguous and hasn’t been followed up on, so she might still be alive. A minor employee at a store turns the main character away at the door and is promptly fired in the next chapter.

    Temper your expectations when diving into this. It’s not bad, per se, but there is absolutely nothing original or groundbreaking about this novel.
  1. VegetaIsBadassVsJ
    The title should be: SSS-Rank Adventurer Smurfing in Low-Levelled Dungeon with a Gal After Being Rejected

    The author wanted an NTR (Netorare) premise but glossed over it with a train of information dumps.

    **Spoiler:**
    "Why are you looking so clueless? It's obvious, isn't it? You're an adventurer with an unstable job. What's the point of marrying you? You went to college, but you're doing a job that anyone could do, even high school students. Your dating ideas are just as unimaginative as when we were in school. Sure, you're putting in effort today, but let's be real. Back in school, I thought it was cool that my boyfriend was an adventurer, and you made more money than part-time restaurant workers, so we had better dates. But you've never taken me to a nice place, and your rank as an adventurer hasn't gone up that much, has it? You lack prospects. I can't marry someone like you. Besides, I was proposed to by someone else recently. We've been dating for about six months, but unlike you, he takes me on mature dates. He takes me to nice restaurants. He's a Guild employee, and an elite one at that. Unlike adventurers, Guild employees are government workers with stability. Plus, he's just two years older than us, but he's already in a high position. He has a better future than you, and I've decided to accept his proposal. So, I came here today to say goodbye."

    Yeah, it's an entire paragraph for a single speech from the ex-girlfriend. The other characters also have similar traits, perhaps it was intentional?

    Storywise, there is nothing revolutionary. The main character (MC) has a doormat personality, getting wronged and just letting it slide. Personally, I think it was the definition of how an adult should handle things—don't bother with insignificant things.

    The story focuses on the MC taking on a new disciple in each volume (called a chapter on Kakuyomu). Each disciple shares the same premise: they have life problems. The MC solves these issues either by literally throwing money at them or by pushing his disciples to be more productive. So far, he has three disciples: two females and one male.

    The story doesn't dwell much on romance. Whether the female characters are into the MC or not is still up in the air. It is hinted that a member of his former guild, the Twilight Tea Party, had a thing for him. However, she hasn't gotten any screen time, and the romance has practically zero progress.

    The translations are decent in quality but drop a bit in later chapters. Common issues include misgendering, inconsistent names (Reito, Ray, Rei), and duplicated paragraphs. Fortunately, it's not as bad as other series.
  1. Raggnarss0n
    Raggnarss0n rated it
    This is quite dull to read. As Touch-San mentioned in their review, everyone who wronged the main character (MC) is punished, and there’s nothing particularly innovative about this novel.

    Let me elaborate on that. There’s no real development for the MC. Honestly, it feels like the MC’s disciple is the true protagonist. So far, there have been multiple point-of-view (POV) chapters focusing on the people who wronged the MC, but these add nothing substantial to the story. At this rate, I have no idea what to expect or look forward to because the MC lacks any clear motivation and doesn’t have much depth. A significant portion of the 34 chapters I’ve read weren’t even from the MC’s perspective. It feels like the MC hasn’t done anything significant.

    As I always say, maybe it gets better later. Perhaps the MC will take some meaningful actions or something interesting will happen. Honestly, it just feels like a very bland slice of life because there’s no real action. The conflicts are resolved too quickly and superficially, almost like a slap in the face in a manhua. There’s just something missing, so read at your own risk.
  1. Noob6writer9
    Noob6writer9 rated it
    The more I read it, the more it annoys and frustrates me, starting right from the first chapter.

    How can someone at the SSS rank, the highest rank in the world, have their data so easily accessed by some self-entitled nobody?

    I would understand if his ID was made to look normal to maintain anonymity, so he isn't swarmed by people wherever he goes. But within the organization? Only a few people should have access to his data! Everyone else should be restricted!

    Heck, if the author didn’t learn this from basic IT knowledge, then from some army or spy films, right?

    Then there's his ex-girlfriend. She complains about the quality of the dates she’s been taken to, yet it’s later revealed that all the places she went to were incredibly expensive.

    As someone who works in a brand company (like the ex-girlfriend), I refuse to believe she was oblivious to the rest of the world. She must have known about the expensive places and the brands she was gifted.

    The author introduces characters that are too stupid for me to accept. It even makes me believe that this is a self-insertion story where he can mess up the lives of equivalent people from the real world because he can't do it himself in the real world. Some sort of pseudo-revenge or a petty behavior of a child. And this idea makes me even more disgusted by the story.

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