- #1
I would suggest actual regression fans to run away from this novel.MC does not make use of his regression. He does not get advantages. The MC just bumbles around meaninglessly everyday instead of trying to understand the world's situation or understand the cultivation world more clearly. He just complains about his lack of talent, and the world seemingly doesn't give him what he wants until he dies. This seems to be the authors way of running away from writing a truly intricate story with logic. He just repeatedly dies to gain "something" because he is setup to be painfully weak, and untalented.Usually regression characters are at least cunning enough to gain advantages by having knowledge of the previous world and timeline but he doesn't use any of that which makes it appear that the MC is s*upid for one or the author really hates this trope despite writing a regression themed novel.Author seems more interested in long-winded meaningless fights and martial arts/cultivation language.MCs progress becomes mundane and meaningless very quickly through multiple regressions. I struggled to read to chapter 30, mind you each chapter is about 3-4x longer than other novels. I'm sure he will gain more "powers" to help accelerate his growth after more deaths; however, I can't stand that the story's main premise being that he wants to stop the cycle of regression. At least for me, there seems to be no real meaning to read this story.The title should be "A Regressor's Tale of Fumbling Around Meaninglessly for 1000 years".The story would be much more interesting if his death actually meant something to others or to the world. His deaths shouldn't be a plot device to power him up - that's f*cking s*upid. Maybe it does later, but it certainly holds no meaning early on.