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As A Trash Collector, I Collected A Imperial Jade Seal

On the first day, Luo Feng went broke and had to go back home. In order to make ends meet, he began to collect trash from house to house. Unexpectedly, he happened to bind the "Treasure Prompter" system. "Ding! There are gallstones in the stomach of the sick cow of the butcher ahead, commonly known as cow treasure, worth 6 million." "Ding! 10 meters ahead, the paper on the wall of the old lady's house is a painting by Tang Bohu, worth 300 million." "Ding! 100 meters ahead, the abandoned whetstone is imperial green jade, worth 1 billion." "Ding! 1000 meters ahead, the woodcutting knife in the woodcutter's hand is a Xizhou's bronze sword, worth 2.5 billion." "Ding! 10,000 meters ahead, the stone that the child hit the water is a Martian meteorite, worth 8.8 billion!" "Since I have this system, who can still see me as a trash collector?" "I am a treasure hunter disguised as a trash collector!" On the first day, Luo Feng passed by the door of a rural quadrangle and saw a child smashing spades with a four-sided object. He went up to pick it up and found that the words "commanded by heaven, both longevity, and eternal prosperity" were engraved on the bottom. "Ding! The child smashing walnuts in front of the house! In his hand is the heirloom jade seal..."

Conquer The Heavens · 都市
分數不夠
870 Chs

The Divine Sea Stabilizing Needle Discovered! Hidden Beneath the Silt!

編輯: EndlessFantasy Translation

Despite Luo Feng's best efforts, no rare treasures had been discovered.

The audience, intently watching the live stream, were noticeably deflated. Unfazed, Luo Feng initiated the system's scanner once more. He conducted a level two scan, followed by a level three, but all to no avail.

That is not entirely accurate though; the scan did unearth an array of jewels, along with tiles hailing either from the Ming or Qing dynasty. However, these artifacts were utterly irrelevant in their search for relics from the Xia dynasty, or the much-coveted Divine Needle of the Seas. The gap between the Xia and Qing dynasties spanned over three thousand years; establishing any connection between the two was virtually impossible.