Imperial

The supreme ceremonial vehicle of the Chinese emperor, pulled by eunuchs and draped in dragon-and-cloud ornaments. A broken, moving throne.

The supreme ceremonial vehicle of the Chinese emperor, pulled by eunuchs and draped in dragon-and-cloud ornaments. A broken, moving throne.

Story context

Alright, buckle up, because Chapter 551 throws Li Huowang into the worst kind of two-front war. Fresh off dealing with the skin-clad Void Nian, he now finds himself face-to-face—or rather, face-to-wood—with the bizarre Imperial Carriage of Great Qi's zombie child-emperor. And yes, riding inside that carriage is a chubby, giggling boy who is somehow fused with the Dragon Vein itself. Li Huowang tries fire, tries the spine-sword, tries everything, but nothing sticks. The pressure is immense, the despair real, and the chapter leaves him buried in dirt, utterly outmatched. If you thought his luck had hit rock bottom, guess again—there's always a deeper floor in the Dao-Twisted World.

Why it matters

This chapter is a masterclass in "scale escalation without power fantasy." Li Huowang throws everything at the problem: sword-through-the-head, self-immolation (literal), strategic targeting of the softer enemy, and even his signature spine-sword fissure. And every single weapon bounces off. The Void Nian laughs off a skewered brain; the Dragon Vein doesn't even flinch at an attack that previously cut through reality itself. The point here is to make the reader feel as helpless as Li Huowang feels—the Qi emperor isn't just *strong*; he's operating on a totally different tier of existence. And that smile on the child's face is somehow worse than any snarl. Get ready for a real low point.

Quick facts

Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
The Dragon
Chapter references
1
Type hints
Li Huowang, Void Nian, Imperial Carriage of Great Qi
Guide tags
action-heavy, high stakes, world-building

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Dao Gui Yi Xian