5 months ago

My Future Refreshes Weekly我的未来每周刷新

A man in a high-martial world, summoning heroic spirits from the future.



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A man in a high-martial world, summoning heroic spirits from the future.



In the Transcendent Era, everyone can awaken a talent, take on a transcendent class, and gain supreme power.

High school student Jiang He awakens the talent [Time Ferry], allowing him to summon future versions of himself from different timelines in the form of heroic spirits — and even inherit the talents and skills those future selves possess.

Thus, one by one, dazzling heroic spirits make their appearance—

The [Savior], who awakens the weakest talent yet saves humanity from the apocalypse.

The [Starbreaker], who possesses a body of infinite evolution and wages war against the myriad races of the cosmos.

The [Abyssal Sovereign], who contracts with demons and ultimately rules the boundless abyss.

The [World Destroyer], the [Conqueror King], the [Symbol of Peace], the [Mechanical Demon God] …

When heroic spirits and evil spirits gather under one roof, when countless timelines converge into a single point—rejoice!

For a being who commands infinite timelines is thus born! Collapse
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Comments 28

  1. Offline
    + 00 -
    Read up to latest [127] not sure if axed or smt. Ngl, went in assuming it would be junk food, but there is surprising character as in the mc's development and for the story itself. Biggest flaw is the timescale ig. Up until chapter 127, it's been just 15~17 days since mc awakens. And yeah, already approaching higher echelon of strength. Still good overall. reader 24 hypnose
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  2. Online Offline
    + 00 -
    Fellow daoist I will believe you on this one
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  3. Offline
    + 21 -
    #panic# MTL says 300 plus the the chapters are only in the 100s
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  4. Offline
    + 20 -
    Fellow Daoists ngl this story is truly goated not like those chinese fast foods , it got some real depth and character development+ insane world building, with a lot of potential. yeah

    You will feel the difference after reading just chapter 2 . wiseacre

    I would give it a solid 3.8/5 welldone

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  5. Online Offline
    + 20 -
    Anyone know something similar to this?
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    1. Online Offline
      + 10 -
      'My Avatar Is Becoming the Final Boss' maybe
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  6. Online Offline
    + 30 -
    Come back pls
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  7. Offline
    The
    + 190 -
    Very good but author stopped writing
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  8. Offline
    + 140 -
    good novel. But I think its on Hiatus? it hasnt been updated on qidian since 4/9 so more than a month
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  9. Offline
    + 143 -
    Warning! This review contains spoilers.

    A thought hit me as I was writing this review: It’s oddly satisfying watching supply and demand play dress-up with destiny: declare the end of the world and, overnight, you’ve manufactured the perfect market for hope. My Future Refreshes Weekly leans into that irony; Jiang He’s Doomsday Proclamation (a Word Spirit skill) rings out, and the same people who would have laughed yesterday suddenly move in lockstep today. The Transcendent Council pivots, budgets appear, priorities harden; the boy who shouted apocalypse becomes the banner everyone rallies behind. It’s half cynical, half brilliant, and frankly, very human.

    Now, onto the meat of it. This is, without doubt, an above-average novel. I’d rate it around a solid 4/5* stars. The writing is clean, the pacing decent (though occasionally uneven), and the world-building intriguing enough to pull you along. But what really hooked me was the MC. Jiang He feels real - refreshingly so. I actually liked how the author leaned into his naivety rather than masking it. He’s eighteen, and it shows. He’s brash, impulsive, convinced he’s in control, and utterly transparent; which is exactly what makes him believable. The narration even pokes fun at his immaturity at times, noting how he “wears his thoughts on his face.” As an 18-year-old, he thinks he can challenge the world and win. And that’s so accurate it hurts; because at that age, reality hasn't properly made you its bitch yet. This novel captures that poetically. Jiang He doesn’t feel written at you, he feels remembered. But what is arguably the best aspect of this story, hits you in hindsight; and that's the development of Jiang He's personality and character as the story progresses. It's done in such a subtle and intricate way that it hooks you without you noticing, and suddenly, you find yourself reflecting and marveling on how far the MC has come.

    Now, yes, on top of character development, Jiang He is also getting overpowered quite fast, but I didn’t find it nearly as jarring as I expected. The author balances it cleverly: his Eidolon “heroic spirits” power is limited to a week at a time leaving him with just one extracted ability. It’s like giving a kid the keys to a sports car but setting the tank to half a liter of fuel (0.13 gallon for those of us in the US), and telling he can take picture once he's done. It keeps the story from turning into another steamroll-fest. It’s a clever mechanic: he’s powerful, but there’s always a sense that the clock is ticking, and that his power, while overwhelming, is limited. That tension between capability and limitation is what makes the early arcs engaging.

    The world-building is probably the strongest element here.
    There’s this constant feeling that the world is teetering on the edge; from Arc Light, to the Beast Riots, to the Abyss. Each escalation expands the horizon of chaos just enough to keep things interesting. The way the setting evolves gives the sense of a living, breathing apocalypse waiting to happen, one that keeps mutating rather than stagnating, and the world seems hell-bent on tearing itself apart - Jiang He is just the (un)lucky kid that ends up standing in its way. You can feel the tension creeping in with each arc, like a tightening coil. Humanity’s circling the drain, and somehow the MC keeps plugging holes to prevent it all from going to hell.
    Jiang He's constant glimpses of his future selves also adds a nice meta-narrative: it’s both a promise and a warning. You read because you want to see what the world becomes, and how he’ll solve the next disaster; but also what kind of person he’s turning into in the process.

    That said, there are still gaps that stand out. The MC’s personal history, for one, feels underdeveloped. We get the tragic bits; dead parents, the lonely apartment, the kind-hearted neighbors - but that’s about it. For someone his age, there’s a noticeable lack of a wider social circle. We hear about school, but no names, no classmates that matter, no friends outside of the cold noodle shop run by his auntie and uncle. It’s not a dealbreaker, but it does make the early world feel oddly small and self-contained, like everything before his awakening existed in a vacuum. Thankfully, once the story picks up, the new relationships he forges feel more organic and lived-in.

    A recent twist that caught my attention was the reveal that
    - one of those background “ordinary” characters - was actually a member of Arc Light. That was a genuinely nice touch. It retroactively added depth to a world that initially felt like it revolved entirely around Jiang He. Suddenly, you realize that other people have ambitions, secrets, and loyalties that don’t neatly orbit the protagonist. It made the story feel layered in a way it hadn’t before.

    The writing itself is solid. No glaring grammar issues, no awkward phrasing that pulls you out. The pacing can fluctuate - some parts fly by, others drag just a bit - but the story’s structure and intrigue make up for it. It’s clean, competent, and occasionally even poetic in how it balances encroaching despair and determination.

    In short, My Future Refreshes Weekly is a rare blend of good writing, believable character work, and escalating stakes that actually feel earned. It’s a story about growth, both personal and apocalyptic, with enough intrigue to keep you reading long past midnight. Jiang He might start off naive, but that’s part of his charm. He’s the perfect example of someone who hasn’t been broken by the world yet, and for once, it’s refreshing to see that kind of optimism written with sincerity instead of mockery. And as the story develops, you find yourself reflecting on Jiang He as he slowly sheds his naivete. This is character development done right, amazingly well, and it's also incredibly subtle.

    However, it’s not flawless. The worldbuilding could go deeper, the supporting cast could use more attention, and some arcs are a bit too long for their own good. But despite those flaws, it hits far more than it misses.

    Rating: 4/5 stars.
    Smartly written, emotionally grounded, and surprisingly self-aware — a story that balances youthful arrogance with genuine heart, and chaos that forces a youth to grow into a young man.
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    1. Online Offline
      + 30 -
      Did I miss something? I'm pretty sure
      is the one that is a member of Arc Light.
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      1. Offline
        + 30 -
        Can't recall if
        . But the revelation is in chapter 131.
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        1. Online Offline
          + 40 -


          My bad!
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          1. Offline
            + 20 -
            Yea - it was a typo, i meant
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  10. Online Offline
    + 210 -
    I hope the author is okay, they haven't updated in a month. I'd like to see the story continue, and safe health for them regardless.
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    1. Offline
      + 200 -
      Everyone on QQ (Chinese Facebook/Twitter) is complaining about it. Latest chapter was uploaded on September 4th, so people are saying that he has become an eunuch (Chinese slang for irresponsible author who drops their novel without notice).
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