The protagonist in 'Auto Hunting with My Clones' powers up through a unique clone-based system that evolves with each battle. Initially, he can only create a few weak clones, but as he defeats monsters, their essence fuels his growth. The more clones he summons, the faster he absorbs combat experience, letting him improve stats like strength and agility exponentially. His clones also develop specialized skills—some become tanks, others assassins—and when they perish, their knowledge merges back into him. What’s cool is the risk-reward mechanic: deploying all clones at once drains energy dangerously but accelerates learning. The system has hidden tiers; after clearing certain dungeons, his clones gain elemental affinities or even mutate into advanced forms like shadow duplicates.
In 'Auto Hunting with My Clones', the MC’s progression is a masterclass in strategic power scaling. Early chapters show him struggling with basic clone control, but soon, he discovers synergy between his clones and the environment. For example, in a volcanic zone, his clones adapt fire resistance, which later becomes a permanent trait. The story emphasizes teamwork—clones aren’t just expendable; they’re extensions of his will. By mid-series, he unlocks ‘Parallel Thinking’, allowing clones to operate independently while sharing a hive mind. This lets him farm multiple dungeons simultaneously, stacking rewards.
A pivotal moment comes when he experiments with clone fusion, temporarily merging duplicates to create a super-soldier. The drawback? Severe recoil damage. Later arcs introduce ‘Clone Evolution Trees’, where choices permanently alter abilities. Opting for a stealth path grants permanent invisibility to all clones, while a berserker path boosts attack stats at the cost of defense. The system cleverly ties power-ups to narrative stakes—losing clones in boss fights triggers trauma-based breakthroughs, like gaining monster traits or unlocking time-limited transformations.
What hooked me about 'Auto Hunting with My Clones' is how the MC’s power mirrors his personality. Initially reckless, he spams clones carelessly, leading to near-fatal crashes. After a major loss, he shifts tactics, treating clones as partners. This mindset change unlocks ‘Empathic Sync’, where clones inherit his emotions—rage makes them hit harder, calmness enhances precision. The system rewards creativity; when he sends clones to study magic tomes, they return as spellcasters.
Unique to this series is the ‘Memetic Load’ mechanic. Each clone carries fragments of his psyche, and overloading causes identity fragmentation. This leads to fascinating arcs where he battles internal demons—literally. Later, corrupted clones manifest as rogue variants he must reabsorb. The climax reveals clones aren’t just tools—they’re potential futures. By accepting their autonomy, he ascends to a ‘Prime’ state, where every clone is a perfected version of himself.
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Luckily, I was reborn seven days before the arrival of the machines.
I bought a heavy-duty truck and evolved the strongest mecha.
Close-combat mecha, long-range mecha, weapons, shields, funnels, modules… This time, I wanted the best of everything.
My name is Victor Wild. Born to be a victor, born to be wild.
Delilah, a human chubby girl's life changes when she has a one-night stand, when she is drunk, with a guy named Dallin, who is also pretty wasted. Dallin, who she doesn't know is not only a Ceo of a multi-billionaire company befriends her despite the people in his ears criticizing the girl for being fat.
Everything goes well until Dallin realizes the stupid, innocent girl has fallen in love with him, but he does not see her more than a friend as somewhere in his mind, he too thinks she is not his type.
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"Mommy, Why did daddy accept the other twin and not me? He didn't want me?" Hope whispered in her mouth, watching her mother's face with eyes full of tears.
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"Daddy, Why did mommy give me away and kept the other twin to herself? did she not like me? what made her chose between us?" Faith's lips quivered as she fought the tears in her eyes.
It only takes five words to drag me back to the desolate dry land of Afghanistan. Five simple words and I'm seeing the blast of gunfire behind my head. Five words and I see her drop right in front of my eyes. Five words causes me to lose myself and revert back into the soldier they made me. Five words."Thank you for your service."Nightmare Warrior's MC is created by D.S. Tossell, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
When the apocalypse came, she lost everything. Starving, hunted, and desperate, she trusted the one man she loved… only for him to betray her in the cruelest way possible. He stole her last supplies to please another woman and left her to die in a sea of the undead.
But death wasn’t the end.
She woke up days before the world collapsed.
After cutting ties with her ungrateful ex and his parasitic family, a mysterious voice awakens in her mind, LUS, a Level-Up System designed to help her survive the coming end.
With knowledge of the future and a system guiding her every move, she begins to prepare. She stockpiles resources, builds a base, and learns how to fight back against the horrors that once destroyed her.
And when the apocalypse arrives again… she’s ready. But survival isn’t the only thing waiting for her in this new life.
A silent killer who watches her like prey.
A manipulative genius who wants to unravel her secrets.
A gentle protector who sees the girl she hides.
And a dangerous man who thrives in chaos.
As the world burns and power shifts, they’re all drawn to her, each with their own motives, each with their own darkness. Even her past refuses to stay buried.
Because now, the man who once abandoned her is back, broken, desperate, and begging for a second chance. Too bad she has no time for regrets.
Not when she’s busy rising to power… and building a kingdom in the ruins of the world.
Luca Graven, an orphan cursed by poverty, worked under the man loathed the most— Dante Solis. He was a wealthy, powerful mafia leader who had the strongest men, including Luca himself cowering in fear.
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Until, a new version of him shows up. He looked exactly like Dante, same voice even, but completely different personalities. This version listened, cared for him, no longer saw him as a mere slave, he nurtured him and treated him like he meant something for once. Of course to Luca, Dante had miraculously grown a heart but that person that showed him kindness and mercy wasn’t Dante. It was Allen Pierce—his doppelganger.
Now torn between two different people, yet drawn to each of them and their different souls, he has to make a decision.
But they don’t make it easy. Luca wasn’t the only one fighting to choose, they were both fighting to be chosen.
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I was supposed to obsess over the Alpha King, scheme against the heroine, and meet my end at the execution block.
Instead, I rewrote the story.
I chose Pierre Ashbourne—the neglected second male lead I once pitied as a reader—and spent three years helping him rebuild his dying pack, believing I had finally changed my fate.
Then he abandoned me at our mating ceremony for his first love, the heroine.
Now, the system has given me only one way home, restore the original ending by pushing the heroine back into the arms of the ruthless Alpha King, Hades.
But the more I try to complete the story, the more these leads are getting out of character!
What should I do?
The protagonist in 'Auto Hunting With My Clones Vol 2' leans heavily into clone usage because it’s not just about brute force—it’s strategy. Imagine being able to scout ahead without risking your main body, or testing traps in a dungeon by sending a disposable version of yourself first. The clones add layers to combat, letting the protagonist outthink opponents who rely on sheer power. It’s like chess, but every pawn is also you.
What really hooked me was how the story explores the psychological toll. Having clones means constant self-reflection—literally. The protagonist debates ethics, identity, and loneliness when faced with copies that think and feel like them. It’s not just a power fantasy; it’s a narrative device that digs into what makes someone 'real' in a world where duplicates blur the line.
The ending of 'Auto Hunting With My Clones Vol 2' totally caught me off guard! After all the buildup of the protagonist mastering his clone abilities, the final arc throws him into a high-stakes showdown against the shadowy organization that’s been experimenting on people like him. The clones start developing independent personalities, which adds this wild layer of moral conflict—like, are they just tools, or are they their own beings? The last chapter has this heart-wrenching moment where the main clone sacrifices himself to destroy the lab, and the protagonist finally embraces his role as a leader instead of just a survivor. The art in those final panels is insane—so much emotion packed into every line.
What really stuck with me was the ambiguity of the ending. The protagonist walks away with a handful of surviving clones, but there’s this lingering question: Is he free now, or is he just repeating the cycle? The series has always played with themes of identity, and Vol 2 ends on this perfect, bittersweet note that makes you desperate for the next volume. I spent days theorizing with friends about whether the 'original' is even the real protagonist anymore.