Liu Yao: The Revitalization of Fuyao Sect
Type
Genre
Tags[ ]
Rating(4.5 / 5.0, 474 votes)
5 | 72% (342 votes) |
4 | 16% (76 votes) |
3 | 6% (29 votes) |
2 | 3% (14 votes) |
1 | 3% (13 votes) |
Language
Support Book (#ad)
Author(s)
One entry per lineArtist(s)
One entry per line
N/A
Year
Example: 2012
2014
Status in COO
Status in Country of Origin. One entry per line
109 Chapters + 3 Extras (Complete)
Licensed
Yes
Completely Translated
Original Publisher
One entry per lineEnglish Publisher
One entry per lineRelease Frequency
Every 83.7 Day(s)Activity Stats [Graph]
Weekly Rank: #2396Monthly Rank: #3896
All Time Rank: #1673
Reading List [Graph]
On 11226 Reading Lists
Monthly Rank: #3214
All Time Rank: #230
Description
Links are NOT allowed. Format your description nicely so people can easily read them. Please use proper spacing and paragraphs.A cultivation story about how a declining sect is restored by a narcissist, troublemaker, meanie, idiot, and wimpy kid.
Associated Names
One entry per lineCoins of Destiny
Lục hào
Льов Яо: Відродження спілки Фуяо
Лю Яо: Возрождение клана Фуяо
ลิ่วเหยา
六爻
육효
Lục hào
Льов Яо: Відродження спілки Фуяо
Лю Яо: Возрождение клана Фуяо
ลิ่วเหยา
六爻
육효
Related Series
N/ARecommendations
Faraway Wanderers (7)The Legendary Master’s Wife (7)
Sha Po Lang (5)
The Founder of Diabolism (4)
Thousand Autumns (4)
Jin Se (3)
Recommendation Lists
- danmei novel i finished reading part 1
- Danmei
- -BEST HISTORICAL DANMEI-
- Xianxia/Wuxia Danmei
- PLAN TO READ
Date | Group | Release |
---|---|---|
11/10/23 | rustycol | c86 |
02/20/23 | Chichi | c6 |
01/29/23 | Chichi | c2 |
01/20/23 | Chichi | c1 |
07/13/21 | Chichi | extra 1-3 |
05/22/21 | Chichi | c109 |
05/21/21 | Chichi | c108 |
05/20/21 | Chichi | c107 |
05/18/21 | Chichi | c106 |
05/16/21 | Chichi | c105 |
05/14/21 | Chichi | c104 |
05/11/21 | Chichi | c103 |
05/09/21 | Chichi | c102 |
05/07/21 | Chichi | c101 |
05/05/21 | Chichi | c100 |
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- Plot in the first half was really good and clear
Cons-
- its too short
ok now that the REVIEW portion is out of the way, time for the rants: (spoilers from chapters 80+)BRUH WHY THEY GOTTA END JUST LIKE THATT. I don't even know how to feel there was no time to process anything in the finale.... literally fooled by the extras too cause I didn't notice that the 3 of them were collected into one chapter so the shock I experienced when I realised it was officially over... >:' (.
alsooo im pretty upset that han yuan has to guard the door for eternity (yep yep im super biased). wish he could just come and chill with the rest of the sect D': there was never the proper reunion scene with everyone either cries
btw does anyone know what happened to the remaining servant boy
im so sorry I forgot your name?? did he just die or something'''' :sad:wayyy too little said in the extras too. what about the training with their disciples?? how does the chicken become a yao king?? yzm and cq's relationship?? excuse me YOURE SUPPOSED TO EASE THE READERS OUT OF THE STORY NOT MAKE THEM MORE ATTACHED
he's so like a weasel becoz he's actually dead for long and integrated into a weasel. Man I won't forget that this so-unreliable master is very dear to his disciples :' (
the only thing I dislike maybe the lack of smut. Well it's more to brotherhood than love anyway
This story features the Fuyao sect and starts off with an eccentric sect master taking in five disciples, each with their own distinct personalities, strengths, weaknesses and history. The first 30-40% of the novel establishes the found family dynamic. But disaster strikes. Their master is killed and the kids uncover a mu*der plot and discover a little of the dark history behind their sect. At this point, the oldest of the five is only a teenager and the youngest is a literally toddler. The oldest disciple has to become the sect master. I felt so anxious for them! As the five try to journey home to the Fuyao mountain, more tragedy happens. The third disciple, our main character (Chengqian), is killed. This was the moment when the novel came to life for me. The arc leading to Chengqian's death was absolutely heartbreaking to read because of the vivid descriptions of the others. Our other main character, the first disciple Yan Zhengming, goes into a state of helpless shock and denial. The descriptions of his emotions were really heartbreaking because they described the end of his childhood and the loss of his innocence. Then we get a timeskip of a hundred years. I notice that priest often uses tragedy to further her characterization. In nearly all the novels by her that I've read, tragedy often moulds and matures many of her main characters - especially the idealistic, young and naive types. The remnants of the Fuyao sect reunite after this timeskip. They're trying to find a way to unlock the seal placed on Fuyao mountain. Along the way, they discover conspiracies and uncover a lot of dark and bloody history. And that's the basic plot. I do wish that the story focused less on the five of them coming together, and more on the tragedy that shaped them and the timeskip... Review:
This novel was many things. It's a coming-of-age novel that was gripping to read. There was humor and lighthearted back-and-forth among the brothers, and there were poignant and bittersweet moments. As always, priest describes the psychological very well and I'm in love with her characters. Yan Zhengming, the unfortunate boy who was thrust into a difficult and thankless leadership position, has actually grown very well into his role as the leader of a ragtag, struggling small sect, managing to take care of the younger disciples whilst searching for ways to break the seal, but he shows spurts of deep exhaustion, anger, frustration and helplessness. A big thread in the novel is his struggle with his inner demons (the xinmo - literally, heart demons), his sense of powerlessness, anger and insecurity, where he fantasizes about ditching all of them even though he knows he never would. In the meantime, Chengqian's narrative thread touches on how he moves from a cold, aloof and indifferent view of the world (he literally resurrects as a sort of ice/jade spirit) into someone who feels, struggles and is tied to life and living (partly thanks to the romance subplot). This novel also felt a bit like a deep dive into mortality and a sort of analysis of the wuxia genre. In wuxia, cultivators often spend their whole life cultivating to become good enough to ascend to the heavens, where one presumably lives happily, powerfully and peacefully for eternity (commented on in Heaven Official’s Blessing 天官赐福). In this novel, the entire idea of heaven is taken apart and examined. Many of the antagonists are characters who have experienced hardship, who want to escape to something better, or they chase after the golden fruit of heavenly immortality and use it to justify inhuman acts, etc, but the protagonists' discover the deeply hidden secret of their world: transcending human consciousness doesn't lead to heavenly immortality. Instead, it leads to a state very like Dust in The Golden Compass- becoming part of the universe. In every wuxia novel, people become cultivators to escape the pain, powerlessness and suffering of ordinary life. When they become cultivators, they become powerful, and they work hard to ascend to heaven, where heaven becomes the goal that gives meaning to all their actions. Now that the main characters discover that there is no heaven, many of the actions and efforts of the antagonists' and even the protagonists' suddenly become meaningless. In the end, the novel seemed to suggest to me that no matter how powerful one became, there was no escaping mortality, pain and suffering. It was a thought-provoking read. There was a lot about life and the attachments one forms to life, love, mortality, responsibility, morality, choice... There were some really beautiful quotes in here. I couldn't help but think of Buddhism - it's not the goal, but the journey that is important.