The cloning ability in 'Auto Hunting with My Clones' is downright addictive to watch in action. The protagonist can spawn perfect duplicates of himself with a thought, each clone retaining his full combat skills and memories up to the moment of creation. What's wild is how they operate - it's not just simple duplication. The clones share a hive mind but can split focus to flank enemies or set up complex traps. They disappear after taking too much damage or when the user recalls them, and the best part? The main body absorbs their experiences instantly. This means while hunting, the real body can stay safe at base while clones gather intel and resources. The system has limits though - too many clones drain stamina fast, and they can't stray too far from the original. The way the story plays with this power, using clones for everything from scouting to suicide attacks, keeps every battle fresh.
I analyzed 'Auto Hunting with My Clones' extensively. The cloning isn't just a gimmick - it's a well-defined system with clear rules. When activated, the user's mana splits to create semi-autonomous copies that mirror their appearance, equipment, and abilities at the time of creation. Unlike some series where clones are fragile illusions, these are physical entities capable of independent action for about 30 minutes before dissipating.
The tactical applications are where this ability shines. Multiple clones can perform synchronized attacks from different angles, overwhelming opponents who can't track them all. During one memorable dungeon crawl, the protagonist sent clones ahead to trigger traps safely. Another brilliant use was having clones carry different weapon loadouts - some with swords, others with bows - adapting to combat scenarios on the fly.
There's an interesting risk-reward element too. The more clones active, the less mana remains for other skills. Taking damage transfers partial pain back to the main body through the mental link. Late in the story, we see advanced techniques emerge, like having one clone focus purely on defense while others attack, or sacrificing clones to detonate accumulated mana as bombs. The progression from simple duplication to strategic warfare makes this power system stand out.
What hooked me about 'Auto Hunting with My Clones' is how the power reflects the protagonist's growth. Early on, he just spams clones recklessly, treating them as disposable meat shields. After nearly dying from mana depletion, he learns precision - creating fewer clones but using them smarter. The emotional weight hits hard when he sends clones into certain death situations; they may be temporary, but they share his consciousness until the end.
The system has clever limitations that prevent it from being overpowered. Clones can't create other clones, preventing infinite recursion. They inherit wounds - if the original's arm gets cut, new clones appear injured. Distance matters too; beyond half a mile, the mental connection frays, causing clones to act erratically. Some enemies develop clone-specific counters, like area attacks that wipe out groups simultaneously or sensory abilities to spot the real body.
My favorite detail is the 'echo' effect. When clones disperse, their final moments flash through the original's mind. This becomes crucial in later arcs, where the protagonist uses these death memories to analyze enemy tactics. The way trauma from fallen clones affects his psyche adds depth most power fantasies skip.
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