[Folklore and the Bizarre] [Infinite Flow] [Traditional Chinese Martial Arts]
Its body is made of four beams and eight pillars, and its form is a representation of the old worldly gods.
Lu Ansheng opened the folk game "The Burial Chronicles" that appeared out of nowhere on his phone. He was transported to a place where evil spirits roamed and where gods were buried. He had to find the remains of ancient gods, build a temple to enshrine the dead, and complete one task after another before he could briefly return to reality.
When he first embarked on this journey, all he had was a mysterious ancient book called "Records of Folk Customs," which offered him a reward for recording folk customs.
All the strange and bizarre tales are in the book.
Wild dogs digging graves, dead donkeys pulling millstones, weasels demanding blessings, livestock knocking on doors, rafting boats, water ghosts taking lives, retrieving corpses from tombs, corpse-driving curses, running through mountains to worship temples, tattooing and encoffining, soldiers dissolving ghosts, money ghosts, painted-skin old foxes, ghost soldiers passing through the road, Tai Sui watching flesh, immortals and Buddhas hanging upside down...
The cloying, sour smell of love...
"Even if the Lord did not create this sword, He has used it."
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After the fall of Acre in 1291, the Crusaders lost the last bastion of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and in the near future they would be completely driven out of the Holy Land by the Mamluks.
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A disappointed Templar decided to return to Hungary after many years, carrying his sword. However, he could not find peace in his hometown. The Árpád dynasty that had ruled the Kingdom of Hungary for hundreds of years was on the verge of collapse, and a new era of chaos was about to begin...
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He placed all his hopes on a boy, vowing to train him to be the most perfect Templar in Christendom, to atone for his own sins. But what does the weight of this sword mean to a boy who has never set foot on the Holy Land?
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The decline of the Knights Templar and the rise of the new Hungarian dynasty, two unrelated bloody histories, simultaneously changed the fate of one man and one sword.
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A fast-paced, traditional historical text. The author is a European history major, so please feel free to read it.