Tags / reincarnation

"reincarnation"

6 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.

The Beginning After the End

3.8

2016 · TurtleMe · 400+ pages · Fantasy

The Beginning After the End combines reincarnation isekai with progression fantasy and emotional family drama in a way that elevates it above most entries in the genre. King Grey's second life as Arthur Leywin gives the story a protagonist with genuine depth, whose past life wisdom creates interesting dynamics with his new family. The early volumes balancing family, training, and world-building are the strongest, while the later arcs lean harder into power escalation and continental war that, while exciting, lose some of the intimate character work that made the beginning special.

Supreme Magus

3.5

2019 · Legion20 · Fantasy

Legion20's massive web serial builds a detailed magic system and a morally complex protagonist around the question of whether someone broken by two lifetimes of trauma can learn to trust, to care, and to stop treating every relationship as a potential threat. The early arcs are excellent, with Lith's strategic thinking, the layered magic system, and the political maneuvering of Mogar creating a story that rewards committed readers. The later volumes struggle with pacing issues, filler arcs, and narrative decisions that frustrate the patterns the story spent hundreds of chapters establishing. But across its enormous length, Supreme Magus offers one of the most psychologically honest takes on the reincarnation protagonist trope, and when the story is firing on all cylinders, the combination of magical progression and genuine character growth is hard to match.

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.

Legend of the Arch Magus

3.0

2018 · Michael Sisa · Fantasy / Progression Fantasy

Legend of the Arch Magus delivers pure power fantasy through the reincarnation of an overpowered mage into a medieval world where he rebuilds a ruined domain through magic and innovation. The kingdom-building progression is addictive, the pacing moves fast enough to paper over structural weaknesses, and the sheer momentum of watching problems dissolve before an impossibly skilled protagonist creates a reading loop that's hard to break. Shallow characterization, a near-total lack of meaningful challenge, and grammar issues throughout limit the series to readers who know exactly what they're looking for in this subgenre.