**“All’s Fair in War” (兵不厌诈)**: This isn’t just an edgy one-liner; it’s a genuine principle from classical Chinese military philosophy, famously articulated in Sun Tzu’s *The Art of War*. The line translates literally to “soldiers don’t tire of deception.” In the novel, Peng Longteng uses it not as a tactical refinement but as a blunt instrument—a justification for breaking her word, which reinforces her character as a brutal pragmatist who sees honor as a weakness.
Share to
Definition
**“All’s Fair in War” (兵不厌诈)**: This isn’t just an edgy one-liner; it’s a genuine principle from classical Chinese military philosophy, famously articulated in Sun Tzu’s *The Art of War*. The line translates literally to “soldiers don’t tire of deception.” In the novel, Peng Longteng uses it not as a tactical refinement but as a blunt instrument—a justification for breaking her word, which reinforces her character as a brutal pragmatist who sees honor as a weakness.
Story context
Alright, buckle up, because Chapter 199, “It Moved,” is the kind of chapter that makes you put the book down, stare at the wall, and recalibrate your entire understanding of the protagonist. The chapter is a brutal, chaotic clash between Li Huowang’s ragtag group and the absolute monster that is Peng Longteng, a military captain whose presence on the battlefield feels like a force of nature. For the first half, our boy is getting absolutely wrecked—outclassed, outmaneuvered, and almost turned into pulp. But then something breaks. And I mean *really* breaks. This chapter marks a terrifying, game-changing shift in the rules of engagement for Li Huowang, and it ends with a reality-shattering reveal that recontextualizes the very nature of his existence in the Dao-Twisted World.
Why it matters
**Don’t rush through this chapter.** The fight scene is fast and brutal, but the real payload is in that final paragraph. When Li Huowang looks to his left and sees a red-clad figure that is *himself*, you need to pause and let the horror sink in. This isn’t a cool “power-up” moment. This is an existential horror breakthrough. He has lost control of his own body. The entity that was once suppressed has been unleashed, and it has its own agenda. This chapter is the finale of a long-burning fuse—the moment Li Huowang’s internal monster finally steps out of the shadows and into the light. The question from here on out is not *if* it will act, but *who* it will hurt when it does. Also, give props to Peng Longteng—she was a magnificent, terrifying brute, and her downfall feels earned through sheer, dirty, tactical desperation.
Quick facts
Source novel
Dao Gui Yi Xian
First appearance
It Moved
Chapter references
1
Type hints
Dao Gui Yi Xian, Li Huowang, Peng Longteng
Guide tags
Dark Xianxia, Body Horror, Thriller
Appears in chapters
Jump back into the novel from the exact chapter references used to build this glossary page.