4.85
[Fishing novel, light-hearted daily life, welcome everyone to enjoy reading] Chu Mingcheng, who was nearly thirty, encountered workplace PUA. Working overtime not only meant no extra pay, but also his date for a prearranged blind date had run off. Returning to his coastal hometown to clear his mind, he unexpectedly discovered a mountain of mud shrimp on the beach and accidentally awakened a "Golden Finger." [Currently unlocked methods of capture: Hand, Fishing Rod] [Mud Shrimp, also known as Mantis Shrimp (Level 18)] [Current Experience: 0/190] [Size +19%] [Deliciousness +19%] [Capture Probability +19%] ... "Go to work? That's just wasting my life." "Date me? Beauty, I only fish, I don't raise fish!" Conquering the ocean, fishing for crocodiles, venturing into the Amazon; wherever there's water, there's the figure of Chu Mingcheng.
4.05
Ye Chen, the desperate fisherman in Riverland City, could catch anything but fish. He even registered a livestreaming room. Swish! Ye Chen caught a cremation urn as a bait box, hoping to change his luck with it. But as soon as someone sat down, a big fish was caught! Ye Chen was almost infuriated to the point of spitting blood! Just when he couldn't take it anymore, the system finally awakened... However, the system's achievements left him dumbfounded. Salvaging military weapons, saving people from the river, encountering floating corpses at night... [The host can catch a fish in 5 minutes] After 5 minutes, a rotten fish was hooked. Ye Chen was stunned. All the viewers in the livestreaming room were also stunned. [If the host continues fishing, a mysterious item weighing 76kg, worth 200,000, can be obtained] Ye Chen exclaimed, "Holy crap! Why can I catch everything except fish?"
The Green Silence is a survival isekai about Teo Reyes, a 24-year-old construction worker who drives into a fog that shouldn’t exist—and wakes in a world that is wrong in ways he can’t name. The forest is only the first layer: silence behaves like pressure, black water hides traps, and bone markers suggest someone is mapping the land with rules he doesn’t understand. With no system, no interface, and no second chances, Teo survives the only way he knows how—one problem at a time—learning to read signs, build shelter, and follow (or break) the routes others want him to take. A strange book of margin notes begins to surface—half guide, half warning—offering open-ended instructions that never tell him the whole truth. As Teo pushes beyond the trees into corridors, settlements, and the brutal politics of whoever controls passage, the mystery of the fog becomes bigger than a single forest. And when he finally finds someone worth trusting—someone readers will fall in love with—Teo learns the cruelest rule of the Green Silence: Nothing here is free… and every path takes something from you.
He was just a boy in 9th grade—full of daydreams, dumb jokes, and a soft longing to feel something real. Then came first love. Then came separation. Then came life. Sent away to chase someone else’s dream, he buried his own passion—writing. He kept his promise to return. To surprise her. To show her the stories he’d written just for her. But when he did… she didn’t wave back. “I Waved. She Didn’t See.” is a story about a boy who was never great, never chosen, never saved. It’s about growing up quietly. About breaking without making a sound. About choosing peace when happiness is too far away. It’s about friendship that saves you. Family that doesn’t understand you. And love that leaves you—without goodbye. If you’ve ever stared at the ceiling at 3AM wondering where it all went wrong—this story is for you. Sometimes, we don’t need to be extraordinary. Sometimes, surviving is enough.
The River Before Names follows Owen Mercer, a 27 year old fisherman from Evansville, Indiana, who vanishes one morning while fishing the Ohio River and wakes in the same land in the year 1412. There are no roads, no city, no rescue, and no explanation. He has only his fishing bag, medium light rod, limited tackle, a matchbook, and a multitool. In a world where every mistake can mean starvation, injury, or death, Owen’s modern gear becomes both his greatest advantage and his greatest danger. Stranded near the Mississippian world surrounding what will one day be Angel Mounds, Owen is discovered by local people who do not see him as a hero or chosen figure. They see him as strange, useful, threatening, and possibly cursed. As he struggles to survive hunger, winter, illness, suspicion, and violence, Owen slowly learns that the past is not simple or primitive. It is political, intelligent, brutal, fragile, and fully human. His fishing skills earn him food, attention, and temporary protection, but every modern object he carries is irreplaceable. His line weakens, his lures break, his matches disappear, and his tools draw dangerous interest. Owen becomes valuable to the people around him, yet never truly belongs to them. Through uneasy bonds with Nita, Mako, Tahu, Sula, and Keme, he is forced to decide what survival is worth when knowledge itself can feed people, divide them, or get them killed. Dark, grounded, and bittersweet, The River Before Names is a realistic survival isekai about a lost man trapped in ancient Indiana, where the river gives food, takes everything else, and never explains why.
"The Hunger Survival Game" tells the story of the female protagonist Shen Xiao's struggle for survival on a deserted island and in other worlds, showcasing her survival skills and resilience in different environments. Shen Xiao uses her excellent cooking skills and strong will to overcome numerous difficulties with her companions on the deserted island, gradually adapting to and improving their lives. Through Shen Xiao's experiences, the novel explores themes such as survival, friendship, humanity, and hope. The plot is fast-paced, full of suspense and surprises, and well worth reading.