Martial Arts Year 1. Cracks have appeared between Heaven and Earth, and terrifying foreign monsters have begun to invade the earth.
Martial Arts Year 100. Martial arts have begun to flourish, and human martial artists are clashing against the invading foreign monsters.
Martial Arts Year 200. Humanity is declining, foreign monsters are continuously seizing habitual zones.
Martial Arts Year 300. Lu Sheng crossed over. Moreover, he had access to memories from 10,000 years in the future.
“The Body Refining Technique from 10,000 years in the future. After more than 10,000 revisions, it’s a thousand times more effective than the one used now!”
“Martial Art Breathing Method from 10,000 years in the future…”
“Medicinal Pill Recipes from 10,000 years in the future…”
“The Sacred Martial Scriptures from 10,000 years in the future…”
Martial Arts Year 10,000. Humanity has gone extinct.
“The Path of Martial Arts had been honed to its pinnacle, yet there was no one left to inherit it.”
“I, Luo Sheng, am Humanity’s final Ember!”



Popular Reviews
After the first hundred or so chapters, the novel begins to exhibit the common flaws of many Chinese novels. The writing often seems aimed at padding the word count, with most chapters filled with unnecessary content that adds little to the story, making it feel repetitive. For instance, it’s not uncommon for an entire chapter to focus solely on describing the MC’s impressive entrance into a venue, embellishing it with verbose and nonsensical flourishes, and detailing how the awestruck audience reacts, further emphasizing how cool he is.
The romance in the novel is a complete disaster. Despite heavy hints suggesting a harem from the future biography mentioning multiple wives and several potential love interests appearing throughout the story, the author ultimately ruins it by forcing a rather awkward and contrived love story. It reads as if a third-grader was tasked with writing a romance. The relationship lacks substance, with no real foreshadowing or foundation for the romance to develop. The interactions between the characters are minimal, akin to those of acquaintances in the same workplace. In fact, he has spent more time with other girls than with the supposed heroine.
Lastly, the main character himself is a significant issue. In this novel, Lu Sheng evolves into a typical arrogant young master with extreme narcissism. The narrative consistently portrays everything he does as right and justified. He beats up anyone who disagrees with him, with no consideration for caution or consequences. The author repeatedly asserts that he is not a bad person but a normal one who does both good and bad things, yet his actions suggest otherwise. The author also feels the need to constantly emphasize how cool, handsome, and perfect the MC is, which comes across as self-indulgent and unrealistic.
The nationalism in the story is quite mild. There's no unreasonable hatred toward other countries. While China receives special treatment from the main character, he doesn't abandon people from other countries.
One of the biggest pitfalls of modern martial arts cultivation novels is when the main character leaves Earth and travels to another planet. However, this novel handles it exceptionally well. The space arc truly feels like a blend of sci-fi and martial arts cultivation, and I enjoyed it even more than the parts set on Earth.
The only thing I don't like is the romance. Initially, the main character and the heroine were just acquaintances, not particularly close, and there were no romantic feelings between them. Suddenly, after they meet again, they are madly in love with each other.
If you enjoy modern martial arts cultivation stories with a strong main character, I highly recommend giving this one a try.
He also becomes rash and shows off his newfound might, such as during a training camp where he destroys property to prove how 'mighty' he is. It's cringeworthy. The MC becomes overpowered too quickly, with repetitive and boring training sequences, like dreaming while checking his 'future' status or endings. The premise is good and quite fresh—using future technology to check his future self—but the execution is poor. The story becomes a monotonous, linear narrative focused solely on the MC. "I am so great, so mighty. I will train! Only I can save the world!" This mindset reflects the arrogance of a pubescent kid who thinks they are the greatest in the world, the messiah, and the only one who can make a difference.
Highly recommend for a great story.
The main reasons I dropped the novel and placed it in my DNF (Did Not Finish) personal reading list:
The main character (MC) was too overpowered and progressed way too quickly, which made the plot pretty boring. Personally, I prefer stories where the protagonist grows from weak to strong, with a slower and more believable strength buildup.
The "harem" aspect was just... too over-the-top, lacking any semblance of realism. I've read some well-written polyamory romances. For example, in "The Wheel of Time" series by Robert Jordan, the male MC having multiple love interests worked because each female character was written as a fully realized individual with their own personalities and depth. In contrast, the female love interests in this novel are reduced to cardboard cutouts. You can barely tell them apart. Moreover, as the MC gains strength, his "golden finger" seems to match him with additional wives, linking his strength directly to his "wife game." This is bizarre and poorly executed. The idea that the government would force strong warriors to have multiple wives to "save humanity" is laughable. It’s clear the author just wants an excuse for the MC to have an excessive number of wives, as if it makes him more masculine. This kind of wish-fulfillment fantasy lacks quality in world-building and character development. Polyamory stories can be written well—if the author doesn’t focus solely on the "overpowered masculinity" to the detriment of the plot.
The only somewhat interesting aspect of this novel is the action. However, there are far better-written action novels out there, so I decided to drop it after passing the 100-chapter mark (I don’t remember exactly which chapter I was on, and my browser history didn’t help).
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