[Fictional empire + war of a hundred races + superpowers + battles in various small worlds + hunter group + slow burn in the beginning + ensemble piece + some exciting moments and some angst.]
God gave life to all things and created the world.
As He was dying, humanity betrayed the god, taking with them greed and wisdom, and established an empire.
The successor, inheriting divine power, made a vow to destroy the world and established the Papacy.
From then on, the Empire and the Papacy were locked in a war that lasted for millennia.
The empire is like a train, with the royal family as the conductor, the four major financial groups controlling the direction, local conglomerates as passengers, and the citizens as fuel.
They hummed a song called "Eternal Empire," riding the tide of the times, their voices echoing day and night on the railway tracks called war.
This book is also known as "I Stole Zhu Yuanzhang's Fortune," and its original title was "Jian Yuan."
A stone man with one eye stirs up rebellion across the land along the Yellow River!
In the eleventh year of the Zhizheng era, the Red Turban Rebellion broke out, and the end of the Yuan Dynasty was in great chaos. At this time, Guo Zixing had not yet started his uprising, Chen Youliang was not yet a force to be reckoned with, and Zhang Shicheng was still applauding and cheering for various powerful figures.
Lu Jin, however, travels to the Hefei area and joins the destitute Chaohu Navy. Faced with the chaotic situation, must they wait another five years for Zhu Yuanzhang to lead them across the river?
No! Lu Jin raised his voice and cried out, "I will quell the chaos of the world, annihilate the tyrannical Yuan, expel the Tartars, restore China, establish order and discipline, and save the people!"
It doesn't matter who is the emperor. Does the absence of Zhu Chongba mean the people will stop rebelling against the Yuan dynasty?