I'm a huge fan of the world-building in 'Avatar: The Last Airbender', and yes — if by "king of avatar" you meant Aang/the original series, the story definitely got sequels in comic/graphic-novel form. Dark Horse published several canonical trilogies that pick up right after the show: start with 'The Promise', then 'The Search', 'The Rift', and later arcs like 'Smoke and Shadow', 'North and South' and 'Imbalance'. These are more like Western graphic novels than traditional Japanese manga, but they continue the characters' journeys, political fallout, and personal growth in a way that feels like an official next chapter.
I love re-reading them on slow Sundays — the art and writing bridge the gap between the TV series and 'The Legend of Korra' so well. If you want a tight follow-up to Aang's era, those comics are exactly it, and they also answer a bunch of questions the show left dangling without feeling like cheap tie-ins.
I like asking a clarifying question in my head before jumping in, because "king of avatar" can point in two directions. If you meant the Avatar universe (Aang), then yes — there are official comic sequels published as graphic novels like 'The Promise' and 'The Search' that are widely regarded as canonical continuations. These were put out by Dark Horse and are easy to find in bookstores or digital comics stores. They feel like the adult-young-adult continuation of the show, tackling political tensions and relationships.
On the other hand, if you were thinking of 'The King's Avatar' (the Chinese gaming novel), the situation is different: there are manhua adaptations and other spin-off comics, but the main story's continued development is mostly in the novel and animated adaptations rather than a long-running manga-style sequel. So depending on which franchise you meant, the short takeaway changes: Avatar got comic sequels; 'The King's Avatar' got manhua and spin-offs but not a single definitive manga sequel that replaces the novel.
I'm probably the kind of person who brings snacks to a weekend binge, and here's the short scoop: for 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' there are several comic/graphic-novel sequels — look for 'The Promise', 'The Search', 'The Rift', and more; they're official and continue the story. If you meant 'The King's Avatar' (the Chinese title), it has manhua adaptations and spin-offs but not one straightforward manga sequel that continues the entire novel arc in comic form. Either way, official publishers and licensed platforms are the places I check first when hunting for the next instalment.
If your question was about 'The King's Avatar' (the Chinese title often written as 'Quan Zhi Gao Shou'), I can speak from having followed the franchise casually. There's definitely a comic/manhua adaptation of the story, and multiple spin-offs across media — a donghua (animation), a live-action drama, and various comic strips and manhua chapters that adapt episodes or side stories. However, it's not quite the same as a single, linear 'manga sequel' that continues the novel in comic form forever.
What I noticed is that while the original web novel continues beyond certain arcs, the manhua tends to adapt and sometimes expand specific parts rather than acting as a long-running sequel manga. If you're hunting for more content after the main seasons, checking both the novel and the donghua/live-action drama is the best bet, plus official manhua releases and licensed platforms for translated chapters.
2025-09-03 17:34:06
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That Prince Is A Girl: The Vicious King's Captive Slave Mate
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They don’t know I’m a girl.
They all look at me and see a boy. A prince.
Their kind purchase humans like me—male or female—for their lustful desires.
And, when they stormed into our kingdom to buy my sister, I intervened to protect her. I made them take me too.
The plan was to escape with my sister whenever we found a chance.
How was I to know our prison would be the most fortified place in their kingdom?
I was supposed to be on the sidelines. The one they had no real use for. The one they never meant to buy.
But then, the most important person in their savage land—their ruthless beast king—took an interest in the “pretty little prince.”
How do we survive in this brutal kingdom, where everyone hates our kind and shows us no mercy?
And how does someone, with a secret like mine, become a lust slave?
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AUTHOR'S NOTE.
This is a dark romance—dark, mature content. Highly rated 18+
Expect triggers, expect hardcore.
If you're a seasoned reader of this genre, looking for something different, prepared to go in blindly not knowing what to expect at every turn, but eager to know more anyway, then dive in!
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Check out my new book, sequel and set in the Urekai Universe: Once His Bully, Now His Whore.
In a world where the werewolf kingdom is on the brink of war, the Alpha King is forced to offer one of his daughters hands in marriage in exchange for peace.
When Princess Xendaya finds out that her younger sister has agreed to wed the Dragon King - a beast who is known for his callous, ruthless and deadly nature - she decides to take her place, making the ultimate sacrifice and signing away her freedom.
Far from home and her people, will the head-strong werewolf princess survive in the kingdom of beasts? A place that is far worse than she thought. Her new husband is not only dangerous but has the sexual appetite of a hundred men. How will Xendaya cope knowing that her king has a harem and has no shortage of women?
Agnarr, the Ruthless, is a merciless leader who has his eyes on a throne that he feels is his birthright, thrusting his people into the claws of full-out war and carnage. Will he continue to bottle his pain, rage, and hatred within him or allow his new queen to help guide him?
How will Xendaya cope when her so-called husband turns his gaze upon her, his newest possession?
How will Agnarr react when he realises he wants a taste of his new wife?
And how will she remain strong and not succumb to her Dragon King's seduction?
In a clash of wills, passion and desire, will the threat that hangs above them allow them to give in? Or will it simply drive them apart?
~~~
The sequel to The Alpha King's Possession
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"Because only you could."
"Then why do you want to kill me?"
"Because I need your blood to replenish." He said firmly.
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Filled with curiosity about this not so stranger, she went with her brother to find him but who would have prepared her for what was in store for her when she eventually found him? Not only did he almost kill her brother, he was hell bent on killing her too.
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And at the ceremony itself, he calmly told me he had cheated on me.
"Go on with the rite, or stop it right now. It's your call."
He swirled the wine in his cup, bored.
He told me that just before the ceremony began, he had sex with a mortal girl.
The world went cold around me. I stared up at the king standing high above me.
"Do you love her that much?"
His brow creased slightly, as if he thought I was making too much of it.
"Not really. She's a fragile little mortal, nothing more."
"You've just been so proper, so well-behaved these past ten years. Never a flaw I could find. It was interesting, for once, to be adored by someone who didn't know any better."
He turned the thunder ring on his finger as if none of it mattered.
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I stood frozen on the altar platform.
I had waited ten years for this day. And now the perfect ceremony in front of me pressed down on my chest until I couldn't breathe.
A 25 years old boy named John is suddenly shot by his friend, which results in his death, but is reincarnated again as the new Demon King. Unfortunately, he agains dies in a battle. This time also he is reincarnated but as a human. Follow Vis' adventure as he gets revenge, becomes a demon and makes his own harem.
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I'm allergic to vague questions in the best way — they force me to go on a little detective hunt, and I love that. If by "original novel" you mean the world of 'Avatar' as in the animated franchise, there isn't really a 'king of Avatar'—the central figure is the Avatar, a spiritual guardian who reincarnates (so Aang and later Korra are Avatars), but they don't take a throne. Aang ends the Hundred Year War and becomes a global peacemaker, not a monarch.
If instead you mean the 2009 blockbuster 'Avatar' by James Cameron, Jake Sully ends up fully joining the Na'vi: he becomes a spiritual and military leader for the Omaticaya, earns the title of Toruk Makto after taming the Great Leonopteryx, and permanently transfers into his avatar body. That’s the closest thing to "king" in that story. If you meant some other book or webnovel, tell me which one and I'll zero in—these universes love to reuse words like "avatar" in very different ways.
Man, this question always makes me smile because it shows how fuzzy everyone’s memory gets between the shows, comics, and novels. If by 'king of avatar' you mean the Fire Nation’s Phoenix King (Ozai), there isn’t a single huge comic arc that tells his full origin story. The comics like 'The Search' dig into family history—Ursa’s fate, Zuko’s background—which gives context to Ozai’s household and motivations, while later arcs like 'Smoke and Shadow' and 'North and South' explore the Fire Nation’s politics after the war. Those help explain the environment that shaped someone like him, even if they don’t do a childhood-origin movie-style retelling.
If instead you meant the origin of the very first Avatar, that’s actually shown in the TV series 'The Legend of Korra' through the two-parter 'Beginnings'. That’s where Avatar Wan’s origin is canonically revealed. For a neat reading/viewing session I usually pair 'The Search' and 'The Promise' with the 'Beginnings' episodes—gives you the family and cosmic sides of how Avatars and rulers form. Personally, I like switching between comics and episodes; it feels like patching together a lore quilt and always sparks new thoughts.
The 'Avatar' novel series, particularly the ones tied to 'The Last Airbender' and 'Legend of Korra,' has a pretty rich expansion beyond the original shows. After the success of the animated series, Dark Horse Comics released graphic novel continuations like 'The Promise,' 'The Search,' and 'The Rift,' which delve deeper into Aang's post-war journey and Zuko's quest to find his mother. These aren't traditional sequels in novel form, but they're essential for fans craving more lore.
Then there's 'The Rise of Kyoshi' and 'The Shadow of Kyoshi,' which are full-length novels focusing on Avatar Kyoshi's brutal, politically charged era. They’re darker and more mature, almost like a historical drama set in the Avatar universe. If you’re asking about direct prose sequels to Aang or Korra’s stories, those don’t exist yet—but the comics and Kyoshi novels fill the gap beautifully. Personally, I adore how the Kyoshi books explore the Avatar’s moral dilemmas in a way the shows couldn’t.