Cherreads

I WAS TRANSMIGRATED INTO A WORLD OF CULTIVATION

fearless1ab
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
11k
Views
Synopsis
> After dying in a tragic accident while saving a child, Wang Hao wakes up in the body of a frail boy named Shi Yao in a cultivation world known as Tianlun. This world is divided into six continents, and Shi Yao finds himself in the weakest of them — the Southern Kingdom. To his dismay, he inherits a body with shattered meridians, rendering him unable to cultivate and viewed as useless by those around him. Initially cared for by a mysterious, strong young woman who calls herself his sister, Shi Yao begins to piece together the tragic life his new body endured — orphaned, bullied, and left powerless in a world where might is everything. Despite his despair, he remains unwilling to give up. He searches for a system or advantage like those found in stories, but nothing comes. His chance comes unexpectedly. After being gravely injured during a beast attack while walking with a village boy named Li Wuji, Shi Yao is rescued by a dying cultivator named Bai Ling. In her final moments, Bai Ling gifts him the Heaven Devouring Pulse Art, a forbidden technique that allows him to absorb the energy of others and use it to strengthen himself. Alongside this, she implants a Meridian Seed into his body — a final, painful chance to rebuild what was lost. As Shi Yao endures the agony of regeneration, he steps onto a dark and uncertain path. His journey is no longer about survival — it's about defying fate, challenging the heavens, and discovering what price he's willing to pay for power.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - A new world

Bang.

A screech of rubber peeling from asphalt.

A child's cry—high, sharp, unfinished.

The glare of headlights, a pale god's judgment.

Then—

A girl, no more than six, stood paralyzed in the middle of the road, the crimson rubber ball slipping from her fingers. The world shrank to a single frame: the speeding truck, unrelenting; the distance closing; the inevitability crawling.

Wang Hao ran.

There was no calculation—only instinct, pure and sharp as glass.

He reached her. Shoved.

Her body flew.

Then came the sound—

Impact.

A shattering. Bone, metal, time.

And finally—

Darkness.

---

He awoke with a sudden, choking gasp. His lungs pulled in stale, heavy air, and his body convulsed as if startled by its own existence.

Pain bloomed behind his eyes, a dull, rhythmic throb that echoed with each heartbeat. He pressed a hand to his forehead.

"Ah… damn…"

The voice that escaped him was not quite his own. It felt thin. Slightly higher. Lacking the weight of familiarity.

The ceiling above was of darkened timber, warped with age and blotched by the bloom of ancient water stains. A lone oil lamp flickered weakly in the corner—its flame thin, desperate, uncertain of its place in the world.

This… isn't my room.

There was no antiseptic tang. No clean white sheets. No soft hum of machines or the ever-present murmur of city life just outside.

Only silence.

And the scent—damp rot, blood, earth.

He tried to sit up.

His arms obeyed sluggishly, like wood soaked in water. As he attempted to rise, his legs betrayed him entirely.

Thud.

The impact with the floor sent a jolt up his spine, forcing a gasp from his lips. Cold. Coarse. Real.

"Ugh…"

He looked down.

His hands—

They were not his.

They were smaller. The bones beneath the skin jutted like frail branches. Bruises marred the pallor, and the fingers trembled as if remembering pain.

This isn't my body.

The thought fell into his mind like a drop of ink in clear water. Ripples followed.

Panic did not come immediately. Not quite. Instead, a dull, growing awareness slithered in: this place, this air, this self—it was all wrong. The angles of the room were unfamiliar. The scent of oil and iron clung to the air like a persistent ghost. Everything looked—ancient.

Dead.

Did I… die?

---

The door creaked.

A girl no older than twelve burst in, her breathing ragged, eyes wide with barely-contained emotion. She clutched a small vial, filled with a liquid that caught the lamplight—a dark, clotted red.

"Shi Yao! You're awake!" she breathed.

The name hit him like a pebble striking still water. Shi Yao?

She dropped to her knees beside him, her movements frantic, practiced. Her voice was soft, threaded with relief.

"Here, drink this. It'll help."

She lifted his head with both hands—stronger than she looked—and tipped the vial to his lips.

The liquid was bitter, metallic. It clung to his tongue like old blood.

"Brother," she whispered, "you scared me… Please, rest. Don't move too fast."

Brother?

He stared at her. She smiled.

And somewhere deep inside, the fragments of Wang Hao's consciousness began to rattle against the walls of a mind not wholly his.

Who was Shi Yao?

Why did this name feel like it belonged to him now?

And why—despite the warmth of the girl's touch and the light of the flame—did the air around him feel so terribly cold?