Cultivation Would Be Easy If People Weren't Stupid II
(2026)(The second book in the Cultivation Would Be Easy If People Weren't Stupid series)
A novel by Kenny King
Casey Timmins built a perfect Foundation.
It turns out that was the easy part.
Now that his methods have proven themselves, Twilight Peak is no longer invisible. Students are breaking through at rates that don’t make sense. Foundations are forming cleaner, stronger, more stable than tradition says they should. Other sects have started asking questions.
Some of them are not polite about it.
But Casey has a bigger problem than politics.
Foundation was infrastructure. Measurable. Quantifiable. Something he could optimize.
Core Formation is different.
A Core doesn’t just generate qi. It crystallizes who you are. And Casey has no equation for that.
While his practice circle advances, while Feng corrects flaws even genius couldn’t see, while Mei rebuilds what Ironroot shattered, Casey is forced to confront the one variable he can’t reduce to data:
What is he actually building?
Because someone powerful has begun to notice.
Master Shin, architect of ruthless advancement and survivor of his own methods, is watching closely. He doesn’t care about Casey’s numbers. He cares whether the method works on him.
And if it does, the consequences won’t stay contained to one quiet, bottom-tier sect.
Systematic cultivation was supposed to make training safer. More reliable. Transferable.
It was never meant to threaten the structure of the entire cultivation world.
Casey wanted to build something worth keeping.
Now the institutions that profit from scarcity are coming to take it.
And this time, perfection won’t be enough.
Genre: GameLit
It turns out that was the easy part.
Now that his methods have proven themselves, Twilight Peak is no longer invisible. Students are breaking through at rates that don’t make sense. Foundations are forming cleaner, stronger, more stable than tradition says they should. Other sects have started asking questions.
Some of them are not polite about it.
But Casey has a bigger problem than politics.
Foundation was infrastructure. Measurable. Quantifiable. Something he could optimize.
Core Formation is different.
A Core doesn’t just generate qi. It crystallizes who you are. And Casey has no equation for that.
While his practice circle advances, while Feng corrects flaws even genius couldn’t see, while Mei rebuilds what Ironroot shattered, Casey is forced to confront the one variable he can’t reduce to data:
What is he actually building?
Because someone powerful has begun to notice.
Master Shin, architect of ruthless advancement and survivor of his own methods, is watching closely. He doesn’t care about Casey’s numbers. He cares whether the method works on him.
And if it does, the consequences won’t stay contained to one quiet, bottom-tier sect.
Systematic cultivation was supposed to make training safer. More reliable. Transferable.
It was never meant to threaten the structure of the entire cultivation world.
Casey wanted to build something worth keeping.
Now the institutions that profit from scarcity are coming to take it.
And this time, perfection won’t be enough.
Genre: GameLit
Used availability for Kenny King's Cultivation Would Be Easy If People Weren't Stupid II