I was promised “genre-breaking” in the novel’s announcement, but what I got felt like the complete opposite, it's almost hilarious they called this 'genre-breaking', maybe it was some sarcastic joke?
Within the first chapter alone, you can easily identify a long list of extremely generic tropes used purely to push the plot forward. The issue isn’t that tropes exist, since every story uses them. The problem is that they seem to be the point rather than the foundation. It feels less like the author set out to tell a compelling story and more like they were working through a checklist of familiar beats to cram into a single chapter.
There is some potential in the grandfather dynamic. Even though it is a trope, it at least requires development and emotional grounding, which forces the narrative to slow down instead of rushing from one confrontation to the next.
The translation itself is fine, so that is not the problem. My issue is the overall structure and substance. The novel leans heavily into repetitive “face-slapping” moments, constant short-term dopamine hits where a new antagonist appears, acts arrogantly or cruelly, and is immediately put in their place by the MC. This pattern repeats constantly. Without ongoing tension, developed antagonists, or meaningful stakes, it becomes hard to care.
The MC fits the standard mold of a ruthless, betrayed young master who is callous and distrustful, except toward his utterly devoted servant whose entire personality revolves around loyalty and suffering until the MC steps in to retaliate. This dynamic repeats so frequently that it starts to feel mechanical rather than engaging.
For comparison, even in series known for heavy face-slapping like Nine Star Hegemon Body Art, antagonists often persist across multiple chapters or arcs, allowing conflicts to build and evolve. Here, villains seem to exist for a single scene before being discarded, which undermines any sense of narrative weight. That is not tension. It is a revolving door.
I will continue reading for now, and if the story develops beyond repetitive confrontations and starts building a meaningful plot, I am open to revising my opinion. At this point, however, it feels more like trope execution than storytelling.
I was promised “genre-breaking” in the novel’s announcement, but what I got felt like the complete opposite, it's almost hilarious they called this 'genre-breaking', maybe it was some sarcastic joke?
Within the first chapter alone, you can easily identify a long list of extremely generic tropes used purely to push the plot forward. The issue isn’t that tropes exist, since every story uses them. The problem is that they seem to be the point rather than the foundation. It feels less like the author set out to tell a compelling story and more like they were working through a checklist of familiar beats to cram into a single chapter.
There is some potential in the grandfather dynamic. Even though it is a trope, it at least requires development and emotional grounding, which forces the narrative to slow down instead of rushing from one confrontation to the next.
The translation itself is fine, so that is not the problem. My issue is the overall structure and substance. The novel leans heavily into repetitive “face-slapping” moments, constant short-term dopamine hits where a new antagonist appears, acts arrogantly or cruelly, and is immediately put in their place by the MC. This pattern repeats constantly. Without ongoing tension, developed antagonists, or meaningful stakes, it becomes hard to care.
The MC fits the standard mold of a ruthless, betrayed young master who is callous and distrustful, except toward his utterly devoted servant whose entire personality revolves around loyalty and suffering until the MC steps in to retaliate. This dynamic repeats so frequently that it starts to feel mechanical rather than engaging.
For comparison, even in series known for heavy face-slapping like Nine Star Hegemon Body Art, antagonists often persist across multiple chapters or arcs, allowing conflicts to build and evolve. Here, villains seem to exist for a single scene before being discarded, which undermines any sense of narrative weight. That is not tension. It is a revolving door.
I will continue reading for now, and if the story develops beyond repetitive confrontations and starts building a meaningful plot, I am open to revising my opinion. At this point, however, it feels more like trope execution than storytelling.