Carefree Samsara
The only interesting aspect of the story is the data ability. Everything else is secondary including the main character. Despite saying he will do his best to keep this acquired talent a secret, he shamelessly performs unbelievably well. He went from a student with low grades to a genius in just a day to be generous few days. He even solved a hard maths question nobody could solve. And just before all these events he survived a truck accident. The guy is just stupid, this ability has been given to a brain dead mc. Such a shame.
Interesting premise and the power the mc gets it pretty interestingand has potential. However, Thats as far as compliments go with this novel. The world is not interesting and charcters and scenarios are cliched. The MC and his friends are the weakest aspect of this novel. They are supposedly seniors in high school yet they are described and all act as if they are middle schoolers, which are one of the most annoyig group of people. The MC is specially annoying, acting like an asshat sometimes, while a nuisance at others. The situations so far are dragged out and are a bore to read. Ten whole chapters were wasted on this forced date/hangout with the future female lead that added nothing to the story besides making the MC look like an unlikeable douch. I would understand his behavior if he was in middle school or early teens but not someone thats soon to be applying To university. At that age I would expect some level of awareness of ones own actions. Overall, very cliched story with interesting premise but unlikable characters, boring world and predictable plot. This is the standard for Webnovels so i shouldnt be surprised. Nothing will be lost by skipping this story or even reading and dropping it half way through. It isnt memorable or remarkable in any single facet.
A chance encounter with Q results in the crew of the Enterprise switching personalities and abilities. Picard is now obsessed with honor, Worf is a neurotic scientist, Wesley is a mature and levelheaded counselor, and Q himself is exploring his newfound humanity. But while the rest of the cast explore their new emotional and physical natures, trouble is brewing in Engineering, as a malevolent consciousness has awoken in the now Omnipotent Data.
Other than having a cheat like ability worth noticing, everything else is bad. It gets frustratingly worse with each chapter. The only good thing about this novel is that, the freedom and infinite possibilities laid out by cheat ability is smothered early on by the author. So, I didn't waste more time on this.
At first glance, this seems very similar to "Scholar's Advanced Technological System" which I was enjoying a great deal until the Author started America and Trump-bashing, at which point I dropped the story. Anyway, this protagonist is blessed with an ability that lets him instantly quantify anything that he comes across. It is less versatile than the system possessed by "The Scholar," but at least he doesn't have to complete missions and listen to a snarky system try to undercut his sense of self-esteem every which way.