After successfully defending their world from the demon's comet, Aeon now ventures closer and takes the battle back to where they came from.
Aeon will liberate new worlds, recruit even more allies and prepare for their final push towards the demonic worlds.
Book 7 of an epic reincarnation/isekai LitRPG story about a man who becomes a tree, growing and progressing throughout the ages in an eternal conflict against a demon incursion. With nearly 15 million views between Royal Road and ScribbleHub, this new and improved edition is sure to delight readers!
Nothing super significant happened. They explored more worlds, some more domain holders were created, and Aeon started putting node/clone trees down and tried out different propaganda methods to get more followers. We didn't actually see Aeon doing much himself - most of it was narration through Lumoof.
I miss proper epic stories. Ones that clearly had an overall outline in the beginning. Now everything is just a converted web novel that drags on and on as chapters are added. I don't remember who most of these characters are. I don't care about any of these worlds. And I can't think of the last time this felt like a proper story with a solid direction.
Book 7 is another masterpiece in a series that just keeps outdoing itself. Each installment expands the world in vast and unexpected ways — weaving together godly rivalries, the struggles of nations, and the quiet, human moments that give it all heart. The pacing never drags; there’s always another layer of the onion being peeled back, another revelation that deepens the story. The sense of momentum is relentless and thrilling. This might be one of the best LitRPG and cultivation hybrids out there — truly epic in scope, yet grounded where it counts.
Closer to a combination of philosophical stories that are loosely relevant to one another. No clear progression (besides the high level goal of defeating the demons) and a stunning lack of excitement. Unfortunate because this series has so much potential.
I will say that the world-building is excellent.
In summary, it just feels like a poor attempt at extending the series for the sake of having an extra book to be sold individually.
I’m loving that the pantheon is expanding and they are learning more about the World Faith System. It’s so interesting seeing Aeon’s development from the earlier books in this series.
Aeon deals with the 15 peripheral worlds in preparation for breaching the demon's barrier. This volume focuses less on Aeon and more on Aeon's top troops and the varying societies of the new worlds.
This isn't my favorite book of the series, but it succeeded at keeping my attention for 16+ hours a year or so after reading (listening) to book 6. 👍🏽👍🏽