Definition
One of the Hundred Schools of Thought from ancient China, emphasizing universal love, merit, and engineering. In the Dao-Twisted World, it has split into two branches: Qi Mo (齐墨) and Liang Mo (梁墨).
One of the Hundred Schools of Thought from ancient China, emphasizing universal love, merit, and engineering. In the Dao-Twisted World, it has split into two branches: Qi Mo (齐墨) and Liang Mo (梁墨).
Definition
One of the Hundred Schools of Thought from ancient China, emphasizing universal love, merit, and engineering. In the Dao-Twisted World, it has split into two branches: Qi Mo (齐墨) and Liang Mo (梁墨).
Li Huowang hits rock bottom—and then somehow keeps digging. Chapter 377 delivers the emotional aftershock of Bai Lingmiao’s corruption, lets the former softest character walk out with a spiteful one-liner, and then drags our favorite madman to the very doorstep of institutional power: the *Supervisory Heavenly Office*. Between hangovers, internal parasites, and the crushing weight of an unchangeable past, Li Huowang musters just enough spite to keep moving. And for the first time in a long while, the world of the Dao-Twisted World shows him something he *kind of* recognizes: the Mohist school. But nothing here is ever quite what it seems.
If you thought Bai Lingmiao’s corruption arc couldn’t get any sharper, brace yourself. This chapter doesn’t just let her walk away—it puts a dagger in the heart of Li Huowang’s self-deception. Her accusation—“do you love me, or just a concubine who obeys you?”—is one of the most emotionally surgical lines in the entire novel. It’s not about the sword; it’s about whether Li Huowang ever truly saw *her* as a person, or just as a devotion-shaped hole in his broken world. And the worst part? He doesn’t have a good answer.
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