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Epic Of The Demonic Sage

Lucius was a man born to a pair of lowly servants that worked for the Great Demon worshiping Barrom clan. Growing up in the harsh conditions of the Barrom clan where magic and power reigned supreme, he weathered through humiliation and schemes. Knowing that he wanted to be the oppressor than the oppressed, he began his conquest. Not averse to betraying or scheming, Lucius made use of his allies as mere pawns to be sacrificed. Learning that a powerful artifact lost eons ago was hidden in an ancient ruin, Lucius betrayed and sacrificed one of his closest people, his lover without hesitation. But he didn’t know that fate had a different plan for him and the artifact he had yearned for would send his soul hurtling across the cosmos, forcing it into the broken body of a young man called Asher Inanis. Coming to his senses he finds the world to be completely different where the magic of his previous world did not exist, but what did was ‘Gifts’. Witness how he learns about the world, gains power and reigns supreme against all odds becoming the Demonic Sage. P.S. This is a slow paced novel and has a lot of world development at start. If this is not to your taste, you may not like it. *** I do not own the cover, will remove it if asked. --- join the discord server : discord.gg/fkTbUfBRsH

Grand_Void_Daoist · ファンタジー
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509 Chs

Legendary Artifact

Lucius noted Maleck's words as he found a few specks of important information in them. He knew that the gods did actually watch mortals, though not as often as one would think. They were usually busy doing whatever they liked and only watched the mortals when something interesting happened or if an alarm was detected.

There were different methods that gods used to rule over the mortals, but most of them chose to automate it unless there was something very important to do. Though there were exceptions to this, of course.

The smaller a god's domain, the fewer people they would have. This almost meant that the god would watch their people more often than the bigger gods. It was simply a game of numbers and they wanted to ensure that their believers did not leave them or lose faith in them.