Golden

A classic Daoist protective mantra, chanted to shield the practitioner from harm during dangerous rituals.

A classic Daoist protective mantra, chanted to shield the practitioner from harm during dangerous rituals.

Story context

We catch our breath—sort of—with a quiet chapter that’s anything but filler. Li Huowang has a new solution to his double-world nightmare: just get strong enough that the cage can’t hold him. It sounds simple, but this chapter is really about what “growth” means in a world where the cost is carved into your own living skin. We watch Li Huowang forge his second *human-skin Dharma artifact*, and the casual horror of the process reminds you this is no ordinary cultivation—it’s self-mutilation as progress. But the heart of the chapter (pun slightly intended) is the slow, awkward conversation between a father and a daughter who isn’t human. Li Sui’s endless questions about fear, acceptance, and belonging hit harder than any monster.

Why it matters

This chapter is a masterclass in tonal dissonance, and *Dao Gui Yi Xian* does it better than almost any other web novel on the market. You have a scene of self-flaying and mercury washing followed immediately by an innocent child asking why “even the steamed buns are afraid of me.” The emotional whiplash is the whole point. Li Huowang is trying to build a life here—teaching, farming, raising kids—while simultaneously preparing for the day he might need to survive a beheading. It’s tragic and darkly funny and weirdly heartwarming all at once.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
The Child
Chapter references
1
Type hints
li huowang, li sui, human-skin artifact
Guide tags
cultivation, body horror, father-daughter bonding

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian