An ordinary boy from the countryside accidentally gets a treasure bowl. With its replication ability, he gets a huge amount of resources and embarks on a journey of cultivation... The road to becoming an immortal is long, and the ordinary boy's road to becoming an immortal...
Just as the Tang Dynasty poet Xu Yin wrote in his poem "The Two Jin Dynasties":
“For three generations they schemed to found an empire,
Yet left behind widows and orphans in pity.
The crime lies with Cheng Ji—Heaven holds the grudge,
The blade raised against a wise ruler brings eternal sorrow.”
The Western Jin was not rightfully founded—it made too many mistakes and inherited numerous problems from the Eastern Han and the Three Kingdoms era.
By the end of the Jin Dynasty, the issues had become deeply entrenched and irreversible. The empire desperately needed a new value system and governance structure.
But, “Who would have thought that high-nosed barbarians could grasp fate,
Waving war banners across the Central Plains?”
History never gave them that chance.
Those who bring disaster upon themselves cannot escape ruin.
A time traveler arrives at the crumbling end of the Western Jin.
What he must do first—is simply survive.
An ordinary boy from the countryside accidentally gets a treasure bowl. With its replication ability, he gets a huge amount of resources and embarks on a journey of cultivation... The road to becoming an immortal is long, and the ordinary boy's road to becoming an immortal...
The flourishing Tang Dynasty was in full bloom, and a shocking fission was imminent.
In the fifth year of Tianbao, he opened his eyes and saw the prosperous and majestic spirit of “the glorious Tang Dynasty, the blessing of heaven to all nations”, with famous generals like clouds, vast territory; capable ministers like rain, abundant granaries; brilliant poetry, dazzling literature; beautiful women, singing and dancing.
He also saw that the whole court was infatuated, arrogant and extravagant, fighting for power; the country was in turmoil, and there were many problems; the Hu people rebelled, and people were like grass.
The drums of Yuyang shook the earth, and he wanted to make this Tang Dynasty not lose its splendor.
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(0 reviews)Just as the Tang Dynasty poet Xu Yin wrote in his poem "The Two Jin Dynasties":
“For three generations they schemed to found an empire,
Yet left behind widows and orphans in pity.
The crime lies with Cheng Ji—Heaven holds the grudge,
The blade raised against a wise ruler brings eternal sorrow.”
The Western Jin was not rightfully founded—it made too many mistakes and inherited numerous problems from the Eastern Han and the Three Kingdoms era.
By the end of the Jin Dynasty, the issues had become deeply entrenched and irreversible. The empire desperately needed a new value system and governance structure.
But, “Who would have thought that high-nosed barbarians could grasp fate,
Waving war banners across the Central Plains?”
History never gave them that chance.
Those who bring disaster upon themselves cannot escape ruin.
A time traveler arrives at the crumbling end of the Western Jin.
What he must do first—is simply survive.