Tags / cultivation

"cultivation"

14 BuzzVerdicts

Bastion

4.3

2021 · Phil Tucker · 829 pages · Progression Fantasy

Bastion drops readers into a city perched on the edge of hell, fills it with reincarnating warriors who have lost their memories, and builds one of the most emotionally resonant found-family dynamics in modern progression fantasy around a protagonist who has every reason to be bitter but chooses loyalty instead. The worldbuilding is dense and the page count is massive, but Phil Tucker writes character bonds with enough warmth and authenticity to carry readers through the slower passages. This is progression fantasy that cares as much about who you fight beside as how powerful you become.

Beware of Chicken

4.3

2022 · CasualFarmer (Jeremy Doe) · 480 pages · Fantasy / Comedy

Beware of Chicken takes the cultivation fantasy genre and turns it on its head by following a transmigrated soul who rejects the endless power grind in favor of farming, friendship, and raising sentient animals who are hilariously overpowered. The humor is warm rather than sarcastic, the characters are genuinely lovable, and the decision to prioritize community over combat creates something refreshingly different in a genre dominated by power fantasy. The pacing can feel leisurely for readers expecting traditional progression, but the charm is irresistible.

Painting the Mists

4.0

2018 · Patrick G. Laplante · 356 pages · Xianxia / Cultivation Fantasy

Painting the Mists is the rare western-authored xianxia that earns its place alongside the genre's best by pairing strong prose with a protagonist who grows through reflection and consequence rather than convenient power-ups. The inconsistent quality across eighteen books means you should brace for weaker stretches, but the highs of this series reward patience in ways that most cultivation novels never attempt.

Cradle: Unsouled

4.0

2016 · Will Wight · 384 pages · Progression Fantasy

Unsouled is the starting point for what many consider the best progression fantasy series written in English, and it earns that reputation through a likable protagonist, a well-constructed magic system, and pacing that makes the book almost impossible to set down once it hooks you. The first half leans heavy on worldbuilding, and character depth takes a back seat to forward momentum. But as a gateway into a twelve-book series that readers consistently describe as improving with each installment, Unsouled does exactly what it needs to do.

Defiance of the Fall

3.8

2021 · TheFirstDefier · 685 pages · LitRPG

Defiance of the Fall delivers one of the most compelling system apocalypse openings in LitRPG, blending cultivation mechanics with survival fiction in a way that keeps pages turning relentlessly. The protagonist's drive to protect his family grounds the power fantasy in something deeply emotional, and the system design rewards attention. Pacing slows in later volumes and character writing beyond the protagonist remains a weakness, but the first few books offer exactly the kind of addictive, high-stakes progression that the genre exists to provide.

The Ten Realms

3.5

2018 · Michael Chatfield · 564 pages · Fantasy / LitRPG

The Ten Realms drops two military veterans into a cultivation fantasy world and lets their real-world skills carry them through a progression system built around crafting, alchemy, and combat. The military angle gives the portal fantasy premise a grounded edge that sets it apart from the typical zero-to-hero formula. Pacing stumbles in the middle books and the writing gets rough during action sequences, but the crafting-as-survival loop and the partnership between Erik and Rugrat keep the series moving forward. It's a million-copy bestseller for a reason, even if it takes patience to stick with.

Aether's Revival

3.5

2020 · Daniel Schinhofen · 482 pages · Progression Fantasy

Aether's Revival is a cultivation-flavored magic academy story that does world-building and character progression well enough to keep readers invested across a long-running series. The rich cultural detail and satisfying power scaling make it a standout for fans of the subgenre. The harem elements that develop after the first book are the main dividing line: readers who enjoy or tolerate that trope will find a lot to like here, while those who don't will hit a wall that no amount of good world-building can overcome.

Dragon Heart: Stone Will

3.5

2019 · Kirill Klevanski · 416 pages · LitRPG / Wuxia

Dragon Heart: Stone Will is a wuxia-flavored LitRPG that brings Russian self-publishing ambition and Chinese cultivation tradition together into something that feels distinct from both. The world-building and progression system are strong enough to launch a twenty-two book series, and readers who connect with Hadjar's relentless drive will find a lot to appreciate. The slow opening, translation inconsistencies, and a protagonist who can feel one-note in his intensity are real barriers to entry. But for readers willing to push past that first stretch, the series opens into something with genuine scope.

Reborn: Apocalypse (Volume 1)

3.5

2019 · L.M. Kerr · 581 pages · LitRPG

Reborn: Apocalypse delivers one of the better time-travel hooks in LitRPG, pairing a protagonist who plans three steps ahead with a layered world that rewards patient reading. The concept is strong enough to carry the book past its prose issues, flat side characters, and stretches of over-explanation. Readers who prioritize smart progression systems and strategic combat will find plenty to like here, but those who need sharp dialogue or a full cast of fleshed-out characters should know going in that this isn't where the book puts its energy.