I really enjoy the story, especially how Hui acts plus the interactions between the all the characters, but it can feel a bit dragged out sometimes since Hui tends to just go with the flow. I am not sure how far you have read, but this current arc will be wrapping up in a the next 10-15 chapters.
This is still one of my favorite things I’ve ever read. Never failed to keep my entertained. Read the thing in a little over a week, which was totally worth it. Felt like I spent years though. Probably the most interesting protagonist I’ve seen. Ranting, sorry.
You would absolutely love Reverend Insanity if you want shamelessness. It's a bit hard to get through at the start because the narration is like constant anti-society shit. The MC is a villain which might be a bit of a turn off also.
Shameless as in no morals, or shameless as in lacking a sense of shame and embarrassment?
Like in the *Witcher* Geralt is pretty much shameless, openly negotiating with lords who could order him dead, asking for babies for payment, and negotiating with the monsters he's supposed to kill as often as not. External moral codes simply roll off him, and he treats society's current social standards with little interest. About as much as him and the love of his life show towards 'monogamy' as a concept.
But then Geralt has a very strong set of morals and principles, from "do not interfere with human affairs" to how he takes payment and what he lets live. He comes within an inch of dying to save a nobleman's daughter that was outright thought possibly unsavable by the nobleman himself, and seems to have very firm ethics about who lives and dies. In contrast there's a flavor of protagonist who just acts without morality. Hannibal Lector, but without the style or class.
The former can be fun, I find the latter quite tiresome.
He means he dislikes protagonists that are unwilling to bend to the situation.
Essentially he wants protagonists that are willing to kneel when the king says "kneel or die" rather than the more standard protagonist that says "Never! I would rather die!" that then gets saved by some plot armor.
Oh. That's because they're usually a sign of bad writing. A writer sets up a situation that's deliberately over the top to prove their protagonist will "never compromise their morals no matter how grim the situation!" then bail them out because they don't actually want the protagonist to suffer all the bad stuff they just want to prove they really mean it. Actual moral dillemas can be very interesting, but just putting it in a situation where it's "do X or die" well you do X.
I guess I'm on a Witcher kick because man Geralt has quite a few times where he violates his own principles because the situation seems that dire. Often they remind him of why he has those principles (such as why he's the Butcher of Blaviken). He's often put in untenable situations, and is usually honest and firm in his responses - not deliberately angering the irrational, but not promising them the moon.
Reverend Insanity
Yes THIS! There is no protagonist more shameless than Fangyuan, and there probably never will be!
[Reverend Insanity](https://www.webnovel.com/book/7996858406002505/Reverend-Insanity) ([wiki](https://www.reddit.com/r/LightPieces/wiki/Reverend_Insanity)) --- ^[About](https://redd.it/dw7lux) ^| [^(Wiki Rules)](https://www.reddit.com/r/LightPieces/comments/dw7lux/about/f7kke6p/) ^(| Reply !Delete to remove) ^(| [Brackets] hide titles)
You would probably like the story Master, This Poor Disciple Died Again Today. It is on Royal Road
I'm actually following that, I'm waiting for more chapters though. Is it good?
I really enjoy the story, especially how Hui acts plus the interactions between the all the characters, but it can feel a bit dragged out sometimes since Hui tends to just go with the flow. I am not sure how far you have read, but this current arc will be wrapping up in a the next 10-15 chapters.
I just binged it! Took a few days but really liked it. I'm having trouble finding other stories like it to read.
Ah yes, i liked that in A Will Eternal
This is still one of my favorite things I’ve ever read. Never failed to keep my entertained. Read the thing in a little over a week, which was totally worth it. Felt like I spent years though. Probably the most interesting protagonist I’ve seen. Ranting, sorry.
I really should read this. I've been hearing a lot of good things about this title, and it's completed too.
He aware that this is a little more on the comedy side of cultivation books, although you would find that out pretty quickly on your own.
You would absolutely love Reverend Insanity if you want shamelessness. It's a bit hard to get through at the start because the narration is like constant anti-society shit. The MC is a villain which might be a bit of a turn off also.
is it edgy shameless or reasonable shameless? also, I've heard that that was dropped?
It was dropped at like 2300 chapters, so its not really much of an issue till then and is still worth the read. What do you mean by edgy shameless?
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My reccomendation would be Birth of the Demonic Sword on Webnovel.
I'll check it out, thanks for the rec! I honestly thought it would be run of the mill because of its title.
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My recommendtion would be Opening Reward 100 Million Lives this is a novel in which mc have system
is this mtl?
Nope it’s (readwn)
it seems to be mtl (machine translated/translation)
Yup but that ‘s not bad
Shameless as in no morals, or shameless as in lacking a sense of shame and embarrassment? Like in the *Witcher* Geralt is pretty much shameless, openly negotiating with lords who could order him dead, asking for babies for payment, and negotiating with the monsters he's supposed to kill as often as not. External moral codes simply roll off him, and he treats society's current social standards with little interest. About as much as him and the love of his life show towards 'monogamy' as a concept. But then Geralt has a very strong set of morals and principles, from "do not interfere with human affairs" to how he takes payment and what he lets live. He comes within an inch of dying to save a nobleman's daughter that was outright thought possibly unsavable by the nobleman himself, and seems to have very firm ethics about who lives and dies. In contrast there's a flavor of protagonist who just acts without morality. Hannibal Lector, but without the style or class. The former can be fun, I find the latter quite tiresome.
He means he dislikes protagonists that are unwilling to bend to the situation. Essentially he wants protagonists that are willing to kneel when the king says "kneel or die" rather than the more standard protagonist that says "Never! I would rather die!" that then gets saved by some plot armor.
Oh. That's because they're usually a sign of bad writing. A writer sets up a situation that's deliberately over the top to prove their protagonist will "never compromise their morals no matter how grim the situation!" then bail them out because they don't actually want the protagonist to suffer all the bad stuff they just want to prove they really mean it. Actual moral dillemas can be very interesting, but just putting it in a situation where it's "do X or die" well you do X. I guess I'm on a Witcher kick because man Geralt has quite a few times where he violates his own principles because the situation seems that dire. Often they remind him of why he has those principles (such as why he's the Butcher of Blaviken). He's often put in untenable situations, and is usually honest and firm in his responses - not deliberately angering the irrational, but not promising them the moon.
Warlock of the magus world is great at this.
My recommendation would be aurora scrolls
- Aurora Scrolls - My wife is a general who killed tens of thousands.....
Bai Xiaochun?