[Infinite Stream] + [4-Person Ensemble Cast] + [No Romance/No CP] + [Superpowers] + [Slow-Paced] + [Light Comedy]
The apocalypse has arrived—and you’ve boarded the last train to survival...
Under the end-times of Blue Star, four girls from Dorm 502 find themselves on the Infinity Train, forced into an unknown, end-of-the-line journey through a collapsing world. In the beginner-level dungeon, they each awaken supernatural abilities and form a powerhouse team: Assassin + Archer + Support + Mobile RV.
Years later, in the wastelands, both the Huaxia Region and the international servers look up in awe at the #1 National Guild: The Cultivating Clan, founded by these four seemingly ordinary girls.
And so the world wonders...
“As everyone knows, we’re just a bunch of young folks who love farming~” — Huajiao
“Trust me—whether it’s a virtual MMO or real-life survival, the ultimate endgame setup is still friends.” — Chen Yue
“From hard seats to soft sleepers to private luxury rooms, I’m climbing all the way to the top!” — Ye Qingqing
“This world is just one big low-budget production… and of course, we four college students are part of it.” — Li Yuandan
On this train, there’s a dining car, private cabins, a gym, a supernatural trading post—everything you can imagine.
Beneath the train lie countless nightmare stations teeming with zombies, yetis, giant pythons, and water spirits.
Here, endless dangers and mysteries await. But so do the blessings of a creator who offers you anything your heart desires.
“The train is now arriving at: [???]. All passengers, please prepare to disembark.”
After five years of struggling in the apocalypse, Shi Man was disemboweled by her own relatives.
But she reincarnated—back to just before the Cataclysm began.
Her old apartment building?
Turns out it’s an upgradable apocalypse homestead.
With her building in hand, she went on a mad hoarding spree.
Soon, those once-arrogant relatives were begging her for their lives.
Shi Man sneered:
“Beg for your life? I want your life, not to save it.”
Floods? She’ll kill what water can’t drown.
Extreme heat? She’ll roast what can’t be cooked.
Freezing cold? She’ll strike what frost can’t freeze.
In a world full of corpses and humanity twisted into monsters, Shi Man—armed with her apartment fortress—is completely unfazed.
Others starve and freeze?
She lounges in AC, eating hotpot, drawing cards, petting cats, and raising animals.
Ding-dong~ Card pulled: Apocalypse Food Factory unlocked.
Ding-dong~ SSS Card: Awarded Human Combat Unit (Catastrophe-Class).
Ding-dong~ Reward: Apocalypse Hospital.
Ding-dong~ Reward: Apocalypse Arsenal.
Floods, extreme heat, frost, earthquakes, tsunamis, mutant beasts and plants, volcanoes…
Disasters come one after another.
Yet amidst the chaos, the slum-like Urban Village everyone once despised becomes a paradise.
Here lies endless food, elite medical teams, the fiercest weapons factories, a supermarket that never runs dry… even a zoo, a botanical garden, and an impenetrable security shield.
This is the last pure land on Earth.
And its ruler…
is Shi Man.
A real-world survival scenario + clash of civilizations + competitive gameplay + forum discussions + dungeon boss clears + no CP. The heroine isn’t one-dimensional but has a chaotic neutral personality—an individualist who might save someone then turn around and kill them. After cursing her, you’ll find there’s nothing left to yell at~
The people of Blue Star have been pulled into a life-or-death survival game—and they’ve collectively lost their minds. Who understands this?! A broken game that forces us to figure out skills on our own. A single blueprint, yet it demands we collect materials and build it ourselves. If I knew how to do that, would I still be scraping by on a measly $3.5k monthly?!
What should be a simple “survive on the highway” challenge ends up forcing us to learn actual knowledge! Where’s the “one-click learn”? Where’s the “one-click craft”? There’s nothing—do they just want us to die?!
Xia Sanfu: “Excuse me, everyone, stepping up to the top ranking first.”
Alternate world—don’t read this as realistic. Not a feel-good story; under‑18s should watch with a parent.