Awakened the Worst Talent? My Clones Can Simulate Everything!

Description

Links are NOT allowed. Format your description nicely so people can easily read them. Please use proper spacing and paragraphs.

【Power Fantasy + Behind-the-Scenes Overlord + Epic!】

What would it feel like if you awakened the ability to create clones, and those clones were bound to a simulation system—one that could grant them a lifetime’s worth of strength in just a few minutes?

Link glanced at his own pitifully weak attribute panel.

Then, he looked up at the radiant, awe-inspiring figures before him—his clones, who had already ascended to the ranks of Supreme Leader of the Human Empire, Prime Minister of the Cabinet, and Grand General.

Just as he was about to speak…

“Boss, it’s getting chilly. Put on a coat.”

Clone No.1 affectionately draped a yellow jacket over Link’s shoulders.

Associated Names
One entry per line
觉醒最烂天赋?我的分身能模拟!
Related Series
N/A
Recommendations
Dimension of the World (1)
My Alter Ego’s Path to Greatness (1)
My Avatar Is Becoming the Final Boss (1)
Recommendation Lists
  1. Simulated Worlds/Altered Pasts
  2. LIARS! No romance/minimal romance
  3. Random List #4
  4. GOODIES

Latest Release

Date Group Release
06/19/25 BOTI Translation c216
06/19/25 BOTI Translation c215
06/18/25 BOTI Translation c214
06/18/25 BOTI Translation c213
06/17/25 BOTI Translation c212
06/17/25 BOTI Translation c211
06/16/25 BOTI Translation c210
06/16/25 BOTI Translation c209
06/15/25 BOTI Translation c208
06/15/25 BOTI Translation c207
06/14/25 BOTI Translation c206
06/14/25 BOTI Translation c205
06/13/25 BOTI Translation c204
06/13/25 BOTI Translation c203
06/12/25 BOTI Translation c202
Go to Page...
Go to Page...
Review
4 Reviews


Sareza
Sareza
Apr 16, 2025
Status: c272
If you are going to read this—to avoid wasting time—because 60% of the information in the entire 300 chapters are useless yapping, read only the dialogues and system descriptions, don't read the stats, talents, and equipments effects. They don't have much impact to the story.

From swastikas, culture invasion, brainwashing, mu*der, assassination, arson, scamming, to pretty much every crime you can name. This novel goes all in. The protagonist, or more like his clones, totally ab*se the fact that in simulations, they can do whatever they want without facing any real... more>> consequences. As long as they get the outcome they need, they don't care how they get there. It gets so chaotic that I was just reading out of pure hype, always wondering what wild thing the clones were gonna pull off next.

My only complaint is that the story mostly just tells you what's going on in each simulation instead of showing it. I get that if the author showed every detail, the pacing would slow down a lot. But still, I can't help but wish for more moments where we get to really see things unfold. Even with that, reading it is insanely fun. It's one of those "turn-your-brain-off-and-just-enjoy" types of reads. The writing isn't anything amazing, sure, but if you're reading for entertainment, this hits the spot.

That feeling of being totally free, able to do anything without consequences? That's peak. Since it's all just simulations and the clones aren't even human, they couldn't care less about what happens inside. They treat it like a game. Killing NPCs doesn't mean anything to them, and no one's gonna throw them in jail for it.

Also, the lore? Huge. The story doesn't stay on one planet, and it gets into stuff like gods, cosmic beings, cults, secret organizations, conspiracies, all that. If you think about it, the whole thing feels like some kind of "infinite regression" story. Even though they kill tons of people in simulations, the deaths still matter, because they gather info from every run to prepare for what's coming. Their real selves die in reality, but each simulation adds something important.

Something I really liked was how some villains in the early simulations come back as allies later. That part was surprisingly well thought out. There's no simple good or bad here, just who's strong enough to survive. It's not just another power fantasy. And honestly, the foreshadowing in the first few simulations? Really impressive. By the fifth one, things start clicking into place, and the story starts revealing what it's really building up to.

The shift by the fifth simulation really changed how I saw everything. All those strong characters from before suddenly feel weak. Like, cannon fodder levels. The first 50 chapters might seem kinda generic at first, and I didn't expect much, but I was really surprised by how it turned out. What looked like a basic power-fantasy turned into something darker. Almost post-apocalyptic in a way.

Every clone has their own personality too. Clone 1, for example, became this cold mass mu*derer because of everything he had to deal with.

And it's not just a straight line of power leveling. There are plot twists that really change things, and some even shake up the whole worldbuilding. You can even say it has a bit of an army or kingdom building vibe.

The author's writing gets way better after chapter 150. Though yeah, it still suffers from the "tell not show" issue. If the author didn't rely on time skips so much, this story could've easily hit 500 chapters by now. Also, for a novel that seems like just action and fantasy, it's weird how it slips into being a psychological-mystery too. But it works. Especially after the fifth simulation, everything gets deeper. You start noticing all the hints dropped in the first few parts.

Side characters aren't just filler either. They've got backstories, real personalities, and they actually make sense. It's not like those brain-dead NPCs you usually see.

Now, the heavy stuff. The fascism, the na*i references, brainwashing, propaganda, war crimes. That was really something. Like, yeah, it's messed up. The clones? They're evil. No denying that. But they're also up against literal gods and crazy powerful cosmic beings, with only nine years to prepare. So yeah, their actions are ruthless, but when you think about the scale of what they're fighting, it's hard to completely blame them. Still, it's not easy to stomach.

Best I can give it is a 3.5 out of 5. It's super entertaining, no doubt, but I don't really like the protagonist or his clones. They get the job done, but it's hard to actually root for them. Still, if you're into chaotic, fast-paced stories with wild twists and deep lore, it's definitely worth checking out.

PS. Okay, that was quite long, I've been inflicted with brainrot while writing this review, save me...

Also, I love BOTI Translations, every novel they tl is constantly being updated, very consistent, respect ✋😔 handsdown <<less
8 Likes · Like Permalink | Report
Kawbbie
Kawbbie
Apr 28, 2025
Status: --
I like the cheat, and plot but I hate the clones actions

The story told us they were emotionless robots who would do anything in the simulation if it meant a 1% increase in power. If this was true I would be on board with that. But they aren't, they keep grudges, they hate some people, and get revenge even if it doesn't benefit them.

And when clone 2 is born he won't do crimes because of morals, even in the simulation where nothing matters, and clone 1 has to "corrupt" him.... more>> What I don't get is why the author put this setting in. Now the clones are just unquestionably evil, instead of robots

Edit: apparently they don't actually have any emotions or morals, they just have preprogrammed responses, which ok, but why make them hold grudges <<less
2 Likes · Like Permalink | Report
MarketResearchReading114
MarketResear
May 12, 2025
Status: c70
I really liked it until they had an analogy to what I assume is hi*ler, and then mocked the west with "West High!" something I assume is meant to echo sieg hail, with an overt emphasize on the failures of the west. It was kind of a throw away gag, meant to play to a Chinese audience, that really isn't needed. You can still have your na*i clone parody, without pretending it's a representative critique/ an overt gag insult of the west... alienating a potential market relevant to potential distribution... more>> channels opening up as AI translation technologies create further market access to authors in China.

There's smaller critiques like the clones being absolute psychopaths, but I think that run away train concept is exactly the point of the story.

We have a moment where they interact in reality, and then that action reflects in the simulation as a sort of twist reveal about a background character's relevance... and I really wanted to see that explored more.

The communication between the original and his clones, and his lack of agency in their actions... feels like it subverts some of the charm of the concept's sort of simulation ad hoc escapist sort of run wild ideas... by utilizing the main character's interests and beliefs in a more involved way... we could've seen a more exceptional commentary on his goals... how they subvert his interests, and how the impact of a life lived by his own sort of directive might end with him being dissatisfied with some core aspect... and reflect in himself a decision to readdress how he handles relationships.

With that said, the genre is a sort of popcorn b movie sort of train wreck concept... and it does it well... but I feel a deeply existential, nuanced, and fun dynamic relationship between reality, and simulation... could really land this at a higher level of artistic appreciation... that I think would've blown me away.

The concept of clones, simulation, and agency, feel like they go well into a psychologically deep, but emotionally varied performance in a fantasy I see that I desire, from the sort of seed of what this concept has shown me about the concept of simulation, clones, and authenticity.

For the critique about how it handles it's goals and tries to achieve them...

There is a degree of lacking stakes, as our protagonist's view point is focused mainly on the simulation, and we aren't given enough of his own experience in the stakes of his own lived reality. He often feels escapist in how he appeals to the simulation to achieve success, but neglects, his own progression, while noting his clone's excellent but bizarre efforts to improve their lives.

With the shared stakes of the host and clone's progress there is a clear dissonance between the goals of the clone to excel, and the reality of what those efforts generate in reality. They feel like they don't care about their host's success, even though if he was a more exceptional person... they would generate a long form progression that exists beyond the constraints the system currently presents them with resource allocation going to clones.

It also presents a nuanced tactical decision about when to summon a new clone, the hierarchy of clone 1 and clone 2... and how a better base of the main character, might create an entrenched class divide between clones. How his position echoes how society treats him as worthless, and how he could there fore treat his clone with lower performance due to a lacking start... in a way that reflects a nuanced an interesting position of either disregard, or of enlightened compassion.. and how that would reflect his own desires for his clones to reform.... and in general give me more meat on this bone of a concept that feels under seasoned.

I liked it for what it was, but it felt like a time waster, that could've been an intellectual heavy weight... if they just got in the ring. <<less
1 Likes · Like Permalink | Report
Greg6699chris
Greg6699chri
May 22, 2025
Status: c41
Although interesting premise at first, most of the story will be about the simulation. At first it's interesting but I suggest if you don't want to waste your time, read something else since this will go boring very quickly. As in lacking text about actual progression in reality, the simulation feels like it is made to be longer than it needed to be which quickly burned my interest.
0 Likes · Like Permalink | Report
Leave a Review (Guidelines)
You must be logged in to rate and post a review. Register an account to get started.