The Discipline Peak Does Not Save Villains
Lin Qinghe never intended to fix a cultivation novel.
He only finished reading Heavenly Sword Dominates the Nine Realms out of pure frustration—
eight hundred chapters of broken logic, convenient breakthroughs, and villains designed solely to be crushed.
His final mistake was leaving a comment asking the author to explain the cultivation system.
That was enough.
After dying unexpectedly, Lin Qinghe awakens inside the novel as Ji Chenqing, the infamous Discipline Peak Lord of Cangyuan Sect—
a cold, rule-bound villain whose sole narrative purpose is to torment the protagonist and die a slow, miserable death in return.
Worse still,
the plot has already begun.
Bound to a Narrative Rectification System, Ji Chenqing must maintain his original villainous role or face erasure, while any excessive cruelty toward the protagonist will only hasten his doomed ending.
Every decision drains points.
Every deviation is watched.
Survival becomes a careful balance between punishment and restraint.
The protagonist, Yan Mochen, is no ordinary disciple.
Born with frightening talent and an unclear past, he endures Discipline Peak’s punishments in silence, observing, remembering, and learning.
Where others see cruelty, he sees patterns.
Where others fear rules, he studies them.
And where Ji Chenqing believes he is merely delaying fate, Yan Mochen begins to notice something far more dangerous—
That his master is no longer predictable.
As sect politics tighten, trials loom, and the system demands blood in the name of “proper narrative progression,” Ji Chenqing is forced to play the role of villain more convincingly than ever—
using rules as shields, punishments as protection, and cruelty as camouflage.
But the more Ji Chenqing interferes with the plot to survive,
the more Yan Mochen’s attention sharpens.