Han

A seemingly friendly but disconcerting Daoist who saves Li Huowang's group. He is marked by his grotesque, rotten teeth and his cynical, realistic view of the world's cruelty.

A seemingly friendly but disconcerting Daoist who saves Li Huowang's group. He is marked by his grotesque, rotten teeth and his cynical, realistic view of the world's cruelty.

Story context

Welcome back, fellow Daoists, to another journey into the beautifully gut-wrenching madness of the Dao-Twisted World! This chapter is a masterclass in the slow horror of implication. We find our skinless, mask-faced protagonist, Li Huowang, frozen in a terrifying standoff with the “Noose-Son,” a creature that’s not a monster in the classic sense, but a *system* of cruelty made flesh. Forced into a cat-and-mouse still-life, Li Huowang gets a brutal lesson in folk horror that isn’t about fangs and claws, but about the quiet, community-sanctioned savagery of "eating the heirless inheritance." Get ready for a chapter that sticks with you not for its action, but for the chilling conversation at its core.

Why it matters

This chapter is an emotional gut-punch, and it’s meant to be. The prose is masterfully slow in the first half, forcing you to feel every second of Li Huowang’s paralyzed terror. Notice the emphasis on the *stillness*—the horror comes from the lack of action, the dread of being within arm's reach of a corpse that hasn't moved yet. This is the "safe zone" horror rule in full effect: a location that *looks* like a trap, a creature that doesn't attack, but a situation that is morally decaying on its own.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
Delivered to the End
Chapter references
1
Type hints
noose-son, folk horror, chinese folklore
Guide tags
Folk Horror, Dao-Twisted World, Social Commentary

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian