webnovel

Beggar Cultivation System

Apollo Leone tried to prolong his life as best as he could. But alas, he couldn’t escape the grasp of death. Even with his talent and being the wealthiest person on Earth, he died on a hospital bed. All his money, power, and influence vanished with his last breath. However, fate proved to be playful. Who would have thought there was a place after death that is neither Hell nor Heaven? There, he met a faceless woman named Aster, who granted him a new life on another planet where strength reigns supreme. But on one condition... Wait?! I have to live my life as a beggar?! Known as the most wealthiest person to have ever live and the person at the very top, how will he adjust to this new world where people can summon meteors, punch through mountains, and cut the sea in half? Beggar Cultivation System Activated! "You received 1 Alm Point!" "You received 1 Alm Point!" "You received 1 Alm Point!" ... ... "You received 100 Alm Points!" "Do you want to advance to the next stage?" "Yes!" Author's Note: -I will try my best to incorporate comedy into it and give it a slice of life style. - If we reach 300 Power Stones each week, there will be a bonus chapter. -100 Golden Tickets = 3 Extra Chapters at the End of the month.

Lncea · Fantasi Timur
Peringkat tidak cukup
319 Chs

Preparing(Part-2)

"No, of course I'm not!" Apollo denied, shaking his head. After calming down from finally getting to use his "Can Deez" joke, he continued, "Whoever that is, he must've used a fake name as a joke."

Elmo turned to the Great Serpent Headmaster. "You know anything about that?"

"No," Axton shook his head.

"I see." Elmo eyed Axton suspiciously, then looked back at the beggar. "He's not really a kid, right?"

"Do you think a kid could reach the 2nd-Step Qi Condensation Stage?" Axton asked, looking around the room, excluding Master Popo, who was still laughing his *ss off.

"If he's really a kid at that cultivation stage, I'll bow down and kiss his feet," Nathan commented.

Apollo considered telling them the truth—that he really was just a kid—but leaving out his mental age. Considering it was one thing; actually doing it was another.