4 Answers2026-07-07 06:26:28
I'm still midway through the web serial, but the evolution is pretty stark. The guy starts off as this typical, desperate-for-strength isekai'd dude who grabs the 'evil' sword because it's the only power he can get, right? But it's not just about him becoming stronger; it's about him slowly accepting that the label 'evil' is nonsense. The sword's spirit influences him, but he's the one choosing what to do with the urge to dominate.
What I find interesting is how his morality gets frayed at the edges. He'll do something brutal to an enemy clan, and the narrative doesn't exactly cheer him on, it just shows the cold logic of it in a cultivation world. Makes you question if you'd do the same. I don't think he's 'evolving' into a good guy. More like he's evolving past caring about good and evil as others define it, which is way more unsettling.
3 Answers2026-07-07 04:18:35
Well, I went into 'Rise of Evil Sword God' expecting standard wuxia revenge power fantasy and got... something else entirely. The initial hook is familiar: a scorned disciple finds a forbidden sword manual tied to a sinister legacy. Where it diverges is how it handles the 'evil' part. It's less about indiscriminate slaughter and more about the psychological corrosion of using a power that demands a moral price. The cultivation system is tied to absorbing resentment and negative emotions, which creates this constant, gnawing internal conflict for the protagonist. The action scenes are visceral and cleverly use the environment, but the real tension comes from watching him try to navigate orthodox sects while his power source is literally their antithesis.
As a wuxia fan, I'd say it's worth a look if you're tired of purely righteous heroes. It borrows the sect politics and martial hierarchy tropes we love, then subverts them by making the central weapon a character in its own right, one that whispers and tempts. The pacing drags a bit in the middle when dealing with some secondary clan disputes, but when the Sword God's legacy fully manifests, the payoff is pretty intense. Just don't expect a clean, honorable journey to the top; it's messy, morally gray, and leaves you wondering who the real villain is by the end of the first major arc.
3 Answers2026-07-07 10:44:41
Finding the right order for 'Rise of Evil Sword God' is a bit of a mess because the title gets used for different things. The main series I followed started with the webnovel on Qidian, then there's a prequel novella called 'Evil Sword God: Genesis' that came out later but covers the protagonist's early years. I'd actually say read the prequel second, because the main novel drops you right into the action and the mystery of his past is part of the hook.
Some aggregator sites list side stories out of order, which ruins a big twist about the blacksmith character. Just stick to the main publisher's list if you can. The manhua adaptation simplifies a lot, so I wouldn't use it as a guide.
4 Answers2026-07-07 10:14:51
The reading order gets a bit tangled because there's the main 'Rise of the Evil Sword God' webnovel and some spin-off side stories, but the core volumes are pretty straightforward if you stick to the main serialization. You'd start with Volume 1, obviously, and just go in numerical order through Volume 8, which is where the official translation seems to have stopped for now. Some sites list chapters continuously without splitting them into volumes, but the volume breaks usually align with major arc conclusions, so following them makes the pacing feel right.
Now, there's also 'Evil Sword God: The Early Years' which is a prequel. I'd actually recommend reading that after the first three main volumes, because it fleshes out the protagonist's backstory in a way that hits harder once you're already invested in his journey. Jumping into the prequel first might spoil some of the mystery around his initial grim demeanor. The main story's later arcs, especially the Heavenly Tribulation Arc, reference events from the prequel, so having that context before Volume 6 is useful.
3 Answers2026-07-07 09:06:28
I'm going to try to answer this without spoiling absolutely everything, but heads up, major ending stuff ahead. From what I've seen discussed, the main arc concludes with Li Xiao, the Evil Sword God, confronting the core conflict that's been building—the true nature of the 'evil' in his title and the system or curse tied to his sword. The final showdown involves the Heavenly Dao or the original sword god lineage, and it's less about a big war and more about a personal, philosophical choice. He has to decide whether to embrace the power that defines him as an evil god or sever it to save people. The hints suggest he finds a third way, merging his identity with the sword's will but bending it to his own purpose, which prevents a cataclysm. As for survivors, his core companions—the aloof female cultivator from the early chapters and the sly merchant who backed him—seem to make it, but a few major side characters from the righteous sects who challenged him don't. His main rival, that guy from the beginning who wanted the sword for himself, actually gets a kind of redemption by sacrificing himself to buy time. The very last scene, from what I recall, is Li Xiao walking away from the ruins of the final battle site alone, the sword finally silent, implying he's free but forever changed. It's a bittersweet, open-ended kind of finish.
Some readers were annoyed that the love interest's fate was left ambiguous, but I think it fits the lonely sword god archetype. You don't really get a neat 'happily ever after' with a story like this, just a sense of resolution to the core power struggle.