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Star Odyssey踏星

Join Lu Yin on an epic journey across the Universe, pursuing the truth and tragedy of his past.... Read more
Join Lu Yin on an epic journey across the Universe, pursuing the truth and tragedy of his past. This is a world of science fantasy where the older generations step back and allow the young to take charge of affairs. Heart-wrenching separations, terrifying situations, all with comic relief that will leave you coming back for more.

This is a world where the other characters actually matter, and are revisited frequently as their own lives unfold. Dotting Lu Yin’s path are monumental feats of kingdom-building and treacherous political situations where he must tread carefully if he wants to get to the truth of his history. Collapse
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Comments 62

  1. Online Offline
    + 00 -
    Sigh, baited by another mislabeled book. After reading for a while, I realized the book wasn’t giving off harem vibes, so looked it up on the fandom and there is indeed only one girl he somewhat has a relationship with. Oh well, like the person below, plot armor and greed make up the majority of his character.

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  2. Offline
    + 01 -
    I've finished half the published chapters reading for almost a month now. So I could give you this review..

    Lu Yin is not a tragic underdog. He is a greedy opportunist wrapped in plot armor so thick it suffocates the story.
    Every major crisis he faces stems from his own ambition. He pushes and schemes. He grabs for influence. He inserts himself into conflicts far beyond him because he wants power, status, leverage. *Fine* That would be interesting if the consequences matched the scale of his arrogance. They never do. The novel pretends he suffers. It pretends there are stakes. There are none.

    Name one irreversible loss on his side. One permanent sacrifice. One mistake that actually cost him something meaningful. You can’t.
    Every time danger closes in, some reason appears to shield him or someone intervenes. And other times political factions hesitate or enemies conveniently underestimate him. Leaders who supposedly built empires and survived endless political wars suddenly look naive in front of him. Enemies repeatedly underestimate him in the exact way needed for him to survive. And we’re supposed to believe these are seasoned rulers? Veterans? Strategists? Instead they act like incompetent side characters whenever Lu Yin walks into the room. Why even start the enmities. They know his ambitions, so either tolerate it from start to end or use overwhelming force to destroy everything up not escalate halfway and conveniently fail. Why is no one truly trying to kill him properly. Why does no top-tier powerhouse just erase him when he’s vulnerable. Because the plot won’t allow it. No one will go all out and destroy everyone related because of one dead man. How many times can powerful, experienced figures act irrationally before it stops being intelligence and starts being author favoritism..

    It gets worse when you look at his morality. The narrative keeps trying to paint him as righteous. Principled. Having a bottom line. What bottom line!!!
    He breaks promises when it benefits him. He twists words when it’s convenient. He demands loyalty from others but finds ways around his own obligations. When someone else fails to keep their word, they’re condemned. When he does it, it’s justified as strategy or necessity or thinking of bigger picture. *It’s hypocrisy. Plain and simple.*

    And then there’s the romance. This is where the cowardice really shows. He claims Ming Yan is the only one he loves. *Fine* But then why constantly maintain emotional tension with other women?(Madam Nalan, Lou Shen) Why accept son-in-law status for influence?(Wendy, Hai Qiqi, Long Xi...) Why allow political and romantic implications to strengthen his position? Why keep those connections alive if he has no intention of committing? He doesn’t accept and also doesn’t fully reject them. He just benefits from the ambiguity.
    *That is not restraint. That is emotional cowardice!*
    If he truly had conviction, he would either formally acknowledge them or clearly cut ties. Instead he floats in between, gaining influence without responsibility. It feels calculated and dishonest. And the story still wants me to see him as noble..

    Let’s talk leadership. People don’t follow him because he’s inspiring. They follow him because he’s powerful. Because he’s dangerous. Because of his threats. Because not aligning with him carries risk.
    His so-called charisma is overstated. Most alliances are transactional or coercive.
    He treats followers like pieces on a board! Assets! Tools! Leverage!

    His actions often scream arrogance. He acts like the world belongs to him. And the narrative backs him up.

    The story also has many good elements. The worldbuilding is expansive. The political structure is ambitious. The scale is impressive. The cultivation system has depth. Fighting scenes has lots of twists and turns. When it focuses on macro strategy and faction conflict, it’s genuinely engaging. I genuinely think without Lu Yin the novel deserved a 4.5 star if not 5. But all of it is warped around preserving one character from consequence.


    And underneath all of this, lies Lu Yin's selfishness.
    Almost every major move he makes is centered on his own advancement. His own influence. His own long-term positioning. Even when he helps others, there is almost always a calculation behind it. A future return. A political advantage. A hidden benefit. That would be fine if the story acknowledged it honestly. It doesn’t. It keeps trying to frame his actions as strategic brilliance for the greater balance.

    But when you strip away the language, the pattern is simple. If something does not benefit him directly or indirectly, he does not prioritize it. If a conflict does not improve his standing, he avoids it. If a promise limits his future leverage, he finds a way around it.

    He builds influence through marriages he never commits to. Through alliances he keeps flexible. Through followers he positions as expendable pieces. He rarely sacrifices personal gain for principle unless the outcome still favors him in the long run.

    People follow him not because he elevates them, but because attaching themselves to him is safer than standing against him. He accumulates loyalty like assets. Protection like currency. Influence like territory.

    Even his so-called hardships often trace back to his refusal to be satisfied. He reaches for more power, then the story presents the fallout as tragic inevitability rather than self-created escalation. There is a constant pattern of “I will push forward for my benefit, and if others are caught in the wake, so be it.” That is not visionary leadership. That is controlled self-interest.

    And what frustrates me is that the narrative insists on calling this greatness. If the novel openly embraced him as morally gray, ruthless, and self-serving, it would actually be more compelling. But instead, it layers self-righteous justification over actions that are, at their core, about himself. He does not fight for a higher moral vision. He fights for his position in the hierarchy. In many ways, he is more morally questionable than the villains the novel condemns. At least some of them are honest about their nature. Lu Yin operates under a layer of self-righteous justification. And after thousands of chapters, the pattern becomes impossible to ignore.


    This novel is a massive cosmic saga. If you love political maneuvering and large-scale worldbuilding, you might still enjoy it.
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    1. Offline
      + 00 -
      I genuinely like this novel but it keeps ruining by lu yin, though i'll continue to read.. because that's what a story is, like life there is good and bad points but just ending will be a waste of having one
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  3. Offline
    + 00 -
    careful with your vehicles around this author irl...
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    1. Offline
      + 00 -
      Is it hina-chan in your pp?
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  4. Offline
    + 00 -
    I'm enjoying this. The author seems to be heavily influenced by Er Gen. 8/10 at around 630 chapters in.
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  5. Offline
    + 10 -
    I've been seeing this novel in a lot of sites for a really long time. I didn't even try to read it, not even once. But every time i quick read the name i read it star audacity, lol. It's totally unintentional. Today i saw it again and wanted to read the details. Not to really start reading it, just out of curiosity. And boy when i saw that 5900+, i was speechless and my mind was saying " it really is audacity ".
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  6. Offline
    + 41 -
    • 5.0
    5.0
    10/10
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  7. Offline
    + 10 -
    Quote: Shiki519
    almost 6k chapters? i don't think this is some slop garbage novel, and i don't remember this relying on repetitive plots either, so im actually curious what is going on.. i do remember the start of this novel being like a different novel genre, and that this has a very expansive universe


    Any updates?
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    1. Offline
      + 40 -
      i havent finished it yet, the firs arc was done well imo, and from there mc will slowly get stronger. The next one is ok, it slows down a bit, but i think the novel really starts up when mc entered Astral 10, it's not really an academy arc or something since there are really few students, its more like a training arc tbh.

      Yeah not sure about the rest but from some comments on other sites and some glimpse myself, the later parts really seems like the best part. This is going to be a long read so I'm taking it slowly kef
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  8. Offline
    + 08 -
    This novel plot was so bad, it disappointed so much. 60 chapter but everything become meaningless and useless.
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  9. Offline
    + 50 -
    almost 6k chapters? i don't think this is some slop garbage novel, and i don't remember this relying on repetitive plots either, so im actually curious what is going on.. i do remember the start of this novel being like a different novel genre, and that this has a very expansive universe
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  10. Offline
    + 92 -
    I don't know why this novel has only 3.6. Star Odyssey is atleast a solid 4(imo 5/5). The plot is very well thought out and side characters have proper character developments.
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