Ninefate

A powerful alien civilization that imprisoned countless gods and immortals in the World Prison; its treasure-refining techniques produce abundant Pure Yang artifacts but few Innate spirit-treasures.

A powerful alien civilization that imprisoned countless gods and immortals in the World Prison; its treasure-refining techniques produce abundant Pure Yang artifacts but few Innate spirit-treasures.

Story context

Eighty-two years of relentless flame. Ji Ning has spent decades systematically sweeping the World Prison, burning a True God inch by inch until his divine power is nearly exhausted and his will finally cracks. But before that surrender, we get a rich mid-chapter montage of Ji Ning’s methodical campaign against Empyrean Gods and Celestial Immortals—testing his sword-art, collecting treasures, and building an unprecedented database of combat data. This chapter is a masterclass in Xianxia progression: patience as a weapon, the art of the grinding war, and the quiet payoff of accumulated effort.

Why it matters

This chapter is a **treasure-hunting and stat-padding interlude** disguised as a training arc. The pace is deliberate, almost hypnotic—eighty-two years of flame, forty years of repeated battles—but every line serves progression. Notice how the author uses Ji Ning’s invulnerability to create a safe environment for trial-and-error sword-art development. The real tension isn’t “will he die?” but “will he break through before the enemy’s will breaks?” And the answer is a slow, grinding yes.

Quick facts

Source novel
Desolate Era
First appearance
The True God’s Burn
Chapter references
1
Type hints
Ji Ning, Brightmoon Sword-Art, five stances
Guide tags
progression fantasy, training arc, grinding

Appears in chapters

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Source novel

Desolate Era