a Chinese transmigrated into japanese...,,.......................................................................,..........................
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LIKEYup and honestly it's not the first time. Most characters change nationality upon rebirth, its just that Chinese and Japanese seem to have beef 😪
LoliHunter420XX:While I do question the ability of a Chinese person to teach a Japanese style of martial arts, making premature conclusions based off a synopsis does not seem fair.
chinese authors tend to have an innate nationalism that they most of the time express in their writing, so i have to say im not too excited either about a chinese reincarnating in a different nationality. the first chapter alone tells me that: 1 japan is dangerous and 2 the basic shinto swordsmanship he learned in china is better than his family style in which he has a certain degree of mastery, he is afterall an assistant teacher in his dojo. i wouldn't be surprised if the next chapters show how incompetent the japanese yakuza are in comparison to his chinese greatness.
LordInsanity:"yeah I don't like it because one person of XX nationality became another" Nice review dude, the way you structured your sentence with the "...." really made me understand your dislike for this novel, I think you're very talented and have a bright future.
it's to fill word count limit... and you seem more talented than me to comprehend what even I am trying to say without saying much...
LordInsanity:"yeah I don't like it because one person of XX nationality became another" Nice review dude, the way you structured your sentence with the "...." really made me understand your dislike for this novel, I think you're very talented and have a bright future.
Regarding swordsmanship, it might really be better. It's not like all of Japan and all of China have some kind of unified swordsmanship style, for all we know his Chinese swordsmanship is considered high-end and the Japanese dojo swordsmanship is doo-doo. There are many factors regarding swordsmanship, one that really stands out to me is the intent of the style. For example, some styles are more ceremonial or for dueling than for other battles. It's not impossible for Chinese swordsmanship to be better than Japanese swordsmanship, especially when its on a small scale like this dojo.
Roktah:chinese authors tend to have an innate nationalism that they most of the time express in their writing, so i have to say im not too excited either about a chinese reincarnating in a different nationality. the first chapter alone tells me that: 1 japan is dangerous and 2 the basic shinto swordsmanship he learned in china is better than his family style in which he has a certain degree of mastery, he is afterall an assistant teacher in his dojo. i wouldn't be surprised if the next chapters show how incompetent the japanese yakuza are in comparison to his chinese greatness.
chinese
Aiwwioddkdkxz:Regarding swordsmanship, it might really be better. It's not like all of Japan and all of China have some kind of unified swordsmanship style, for all we know his Chinese swordsmanship is considered high-end and the Japanese dojo swordsmanship is doo-doo. There are many factors regarding swordsmanship, one that really stands out to me is the intent of the style. For example, some styles are more ceremonial or for dueling than for other battles. It's not impossible for Chinese swordsmanship to be better than Japanese swordsmanship, especially when its on a small scale like this dojo.