The lord of all that is unholy.
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At the moment, I'm focused on Reverend Ecstasy. When I'm done with that, we can talk about FT.
1) He did lose fights. 2) If you paid attention, you'd know that foreign gods (like the Overlord and the Warden) have limited influence in the lower realm. Them not being able to conquer the mortal worlds has nothing to do with strength. 3) This story isn't for everyone.
Oh yeah. That use of "pursue" to replace "follow" or "carry on" was a bad habit I picked up and dropped years ago for reasons I don't remember. It is not incorrect, per se, but bad writing for sure. As for "revolt" being archaic, that's correct. Today I'd argue that in a formal war context, it can still play a role and add gravity to the situation. That aside, yeah, it doesn't make for fluid writing. As for why WN authors prefer it, I don't know. Maybe they also speak French, in which case it makes perfect sense. But judging from my inkstone data, French isn't a common second language here.
I don't know man, I wrote this a long time ago and need some context to fully address what you're talking about but... 1) In the sense of "rising in rebellion," Revolt and Rebel are interchangeable verbs (unless you're going into political semantics—I want no part in that). 2) I often used "pursue" when talking about the Grand Dao, Supremacy, or related Xianxia terms. In that sense, it means "chase" and is also correct. Now, I'm sure there are words I've used incorrectly. Maybe even these two, depending on circumstances. But I'd need context to address that.
Thanks for the love mate.
Hi, I created a new account (Evil_Dao) and am writing a new story there (Reverend Ecstasy).
That's not the case. 579 is the final chap.
It's fine. I retire.
Most of the answers require spoilers. What I can tell you for sure is that Ancestors here = Almighty in PpoD.
Either you skimmed through pages or you outright didn't read the story. If you did you'd know that by the end of the first volume, there are only three named females. One is the mc's lover, another is an enemy, and the last turns into a subordinate. So where exactly are the "thousands of goddesses?" In the very first chapter, it is written black on white, that the mc dallied with plenty of princesses in his homeworld, he just never considered them to be relationship material. What is wrong with that? Not being fazed by random beauties after nearly two centuries of existence is a natural occurance. How did that also become a problem? You seem to be specifically looking for smut-oriented cultivation novels; I've never advertised this as one. Not sure why you bring such complaints here.