Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Author | Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (Chinese: 墨香铜臭) Also known as: MXTX | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Original title | 魔道祖师 | ||||||||||
Language | Chinese | ||||||||||
Genre | Xianxia[1] Danmei[1] Mystery[2] | ||||||||||
Publisher | Jinjiang Literature City | ||||||||||
Publication date | October 31, 2015 - March 1, 2016 | ||||||||||
Publication place | China | ||||||||||
Published in English | December 14, 2021 - May 2, 2023 Seven Seas Entertainment | ||||||||||
Media type | Web Novel Print (paperback & hardback) Audiobook E-book | ||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 魔道祖師 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 魔道祖师 | ||||||||||
Literal meaning | Demonic Path Ancestral Master | ||||||||||
|
Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation (Chinese: 魔道祖师; pinyin: Mó Dào Zǔ Shī; lit. 'Demonic Path Ancestral Master'), or MDZS[a] is a danmei[1] novel written by Chinese author Mo Xiang Tong Xiu, also known as MXTX.[b] The story is set in a fictional xianxia world where humans known as "cultivators" specialize in spiritual, physical, and paranormal pursuits to achieve transcendence from mortality. It tells the tale of the eponymous Wei Wuxian, who diverged from conventional practices and invented an unorthodox path of cultivation.
Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation follows several interwoven stories: two parallel tales recounting the events of Wei Wuxian's past and present lives, the investigation of the mystery behind a fierce dismembered entity presently terrorizing the cultivation world, and the development of the novel's central love story between Wei Wuxian and Lan Wangji, his former classmate and fellow cultivator.
Within the world of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, issues concerning loyalty, classism, power and corruption, perception vs. reality, and ethics of violence frequently come about. The story is littered with true magical elements and supernatural beings, but the focus is on human characters in grounded conflicts.
The novel originated as a serialized fiction on the Chinese online platform Jinjiang Literature City[c] from 2015 to 2016.[3] As of December 2022[update], it has been officially translated into 11 different languages. The first two volumes of the ongoing official English translation reached The New York Times Best Seller list upon their release.[4][5]
Among its official multimedia adaptations are a webcomic, an audio drama, an animated series and its spin-off, an audiobook, a live action web series, and an upcoming mobile game.
Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation is noted for the vast popularity and proliferation of its same-sex romantic couple Wangxian,[d] and for its intensely devoted fan community both within China and abroad.[6][7][8]
Synopsis
[edit]Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation is the story of the rise, death, and rebirth of Wei Wuxian (魏无羡), a man who made a name for himself as a cultivator with unconventional and forbidden methods to control the undead. Renowned as the founder of the 'Demonic Path,' he is eventually killed during an attack by the Four Great Clans.
Thirteen years later, Wei Wuxian's spirit is forcefully summoned during a self-sacrificial ritual and he incarnates into the body of a man named Mo Xuanyu (莫玄羽). Wei Wuxian soon becomes embroiled in an investigation of a series of attacks by a feral dismembered corpse. With a new and unrecognizable face, he attempts to hide his return from the familiar faces he reunites with along his journey. But the stoic Lan Wangji (蓝忘机) of the Gusu Lan Clan may suspect more than he lets on, and Wei Wuxian may have to face the truth of his resurrection in a world changed by his thirteen-year absence, along with his true feelings for Lan Wangji.
The Wangxian (忘羡) storyline tells of the deep connection between two men who see past surface distractions to recognize the similarities in the way they live their lives, the values they uphold, their sense of purpose, strength, and self-worth, and of the potential for profound happiness that may result from such.
Story overview
[edit]Setting
[edit]Set in a fictional xianxia world reminiscent of ancient China, where human civilization consists of ordinary commoners and people who belong in the cultivation world, around which the story revolves. Cultivators train and work to accomplish superhuman feats in their attempt to reach transcendence from the mortal realm. Those with sufficient control over their spiritual energy undertake fantastical tasks such as liberating spirits, fighting malevolent ghosts and fierce corpses, exorcising haunted places or objects, and hunting down yaoguai and powerful lawless individuals. Their powers may be channeled through spiritual weapons, musical instruments, arrays, talismans, alchemy, and various other forms of cultivation tools.
The Golden Core (金丹, Jīn Dān) is a cultivated orb materialized from concentrated Qi—fundamental energy that constitutes overall health—within the body of a living person and functions as storage for their spiritual power.[9] Once formed, the golden core may escalate the user's cultivation level, resulting in faster skill development and increased longevity. It is a crucial aspect of being a cultivator, as there are certain feats, techniques, and defensive methods that can only be performed with the help of a well-developed golden core. Core formation and development can be achieved through years of diligent routine practices such as meditation and general martial arts training. A person's golden core is impossible to restore if destroyed or removed. Humans who do not possess one, or those who form it late in life, never develop a strong cultivation base and must rely on tools, techniques, or other 'paths' that do not require extensive use of their own spiritual energy.[10][11]
The cultivation world is made up of numerous clans big and small. In the recent past, the most prominent of these were the Five Great Clans: Qishan Wen Clan (岐山温氏; Qíshān Wēn Shì), Yunmeng Jiang Clan (云梦江氏; Yúnmèng Jiāng Shì), Gusu Lan Clan (姑苏蓝氏; Gūsū Lán Shì), Lanling Jin Clan (兰陵金氏; Lánlíng Jīn Shì), and Qinghe Nie Clan (清河聂氏; Qīnghé Niè Shì).[12] Each clan is situated at their respective region wherein disciples are trained in their specific clan-oriented 'cultivation path,' which they use in practice to protect citizens under their jurisdiction from physical and paranormal threats,[13] to gain glory for their clan,[14] and to improve their personal cultivation level. These pursuits are called Night Hunts, due to mostly being carried out at night as it is the likeliest time of day that supernatural creatures come about.[14]
Aside from their capacity to perform superhuman feats, most cultivators are presented as gentry scholars who train and may become proficient in the Chinese Six Arts, which places them at the top of the social hierarchy.[14] Meanwhile, there are also those who exist as "rogue cultivators," ones who do not belong in any clan, sect, or organization due to them abandoning it, never being in one, being expelled, or their clan/sect being destroyed.
Plot summary
[edit](The novel has a non-linear narrative structure with several intertwining plots. Below is a per storyline summary of events.)
The principal storyline begins thirteen years after the death of Wei Wuxian, the Yiling Patriarch (夷陵老祖; Yílíng Lǎozǔ), as he is summoned back to life by Mo Xuanyu through a self-sacrificial ritual. Wei Wuxian is reborn and awakens in the body of a homosexual lunatic, while fully cognizant of his own identity. He finds himself in Mo Village, where he is to fulfill the ritual's condition—to take revenge on Mo Xuanyu's behalf and exterminate the Mo family for abusing him—or else Wei Wuxian's own soul will be forever annihilated. He is freed from this condition when a vicious entity appears and goes on a murder spree that kills every one of Mo Xuanyu's abusers. While exploring the new world he finds himself in, he stumbles into people from his past and ends up accompanying Lan Wangji, his former classmate and a highly esteemed cultivator. The two become embroiled in the mystery of the evil entity, which left in its path a series of clues all seemingly leading back to Wei Wuxian's past. As they travel to unravel the case, Wei Wuxian re-lives previously encountered struggles and trials, and attempts to deal with the hatred of the cultivation world once more, along with the changes in his relationship with Lan Wangji.
While the main narrative covers the present timeline, it is intermingled with intermittent flashbacks recounting Wei Wuxian's previous life, from his glory days as a promising young cultivator until his death as the reviled Yiling Patriarch. As the 15-year-old senior disciple of the Yunmeng Jiang Clan, Wei Wuxian was a highly charismatic, willful, intelligent young man possessing a strong cultivation base and exceptional skills. He had a close relationship with his clan siblings, Jiang Yanli (江厌离) and Jiang Cheng (江澄). While in Cloud Recesses, he met the stern and aloof Lan Wangji, one of the Twin Jades of the Gusu Lan Clan. The two would maintain an ambiguous relationship throughout their years of acquaintance prior to Wei Wuxian's death.
At a crucial point in the story, Wei Wuxian invented the Ghost Path (鬼道, guǐ dào)[e] of cultivation which, unlike other paths, functions by harvesting and manipulating the resentful energy emitted by fierce ghosts and corpses. With this use of unorthodox methods to overthrow the tyrannical Qishan Wen Clan during the Sunshot Campaign, the cultivation world hailed Wei Wuxian as a war hero for his significant efforts and contributions that led to their victory. However, the fickle nature of society soon reared its head as the clans began to perceive him as a dangerous threat—someone willful and powerful enough to break out from the confines of society's rules, or someone who suffered from moral decay due to walking down the crooked path—while they coveted his powerful inventions all the same. Tensions escalated as Wei Wuxian kept up his objections to the Lanling Jin Clan's inhumane treatment of prisoners of war. Trapped between incompatible duties, he took it upon himself to rescue the Wen refugees and become their sole protector at the Burial Mounds in Yiling, willingly taking on people's anger and distrust with unshakeable conviction. He thus gained the title of Yiling Patriarch and was vilified as a traitor to the Jiangs and declared an "enemy of the cultivation world." Rumors and conspiracies arose, leading to more deaths and devastation, and with the fallout of morals and priorities colliding, it all came to a head at the First Siege of the Burial Mounds by the Four Great Clans, during which Wei Wuxian and the people he was protecting met their inglorious and bloody demise, and the world rejoiced.
The overarching story is a romantic arc that deals with the development of the novel's central love story between Wei Wuxian and Lan Wangji. Focalized through Wei Wuxian's limited point of view, it tells of their carefree, flirtatious days as teens—with the irreverent, mischievous Wei Wuxian juxtaposed against the somber, stickler-for-rules Lan Wangji; of the tentative bond they developed as young adults navigating the contentious issue of Wei Wuxian's cultivation path and the conflicts and struggles they're confronted with; and of their reunion thirteen years later when their dynamic swiftly turns into an emotionally intense mixture of extreme dedication, and overwhelming mutual romantic and sexual desire. It is eventually revealed that Lan Wangji had been secretly yearning for Wei Wuxian the whole time they'd known each other, and that his love and devotion never faltered in all the years the latter had been dead.
Publication history
[edit]Overview
[edit]The first chapter was released on the Chinese web novel platform Jinjiang Literature City (晋江文学城) on October 31, 2015, and serialization continued until the main story's completion on March 1, 2016.[17] The next several months were spent revising the main chapters, while side stories (or "extra chapters") were released sporadically. Revision of the main story was posted on August 11, 2016, and the last four extra chapters were added between December 22, 2017, and January 1, 2018. Overall, the novel's online version had a total of 113 main chapters and seven extra chapters, most of which occur after the story's main events (also known as "post-canon").
The Taiwan first print edition was published by Pinsin Studio (平心工作室) in December 2016 in Traditional Chinese. It consists of four volumes containing the uncensored main story and four extra chapters, one of which is an exclusive extra (From Dawn to Dusk) that was never published on the Jinjiang site.[f]
In December 2018, Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House (四川文艺出版社) published the first volume, titled "无羁" (pinyin: Wújī; lit. 'Untamed') in Simplified Chinese. It contains chapters 1-42 and the extra chapter Lotus Seed Pod, as well as a commemorative letter written by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu on October 31, 2018, the third anniversary of the web novel's original serialization. Subsequent volumes are stalled due to the novel being censured and eventually locked on the Jinjiang platform in January 2019.[3]
In August 2019, Pinsin Studio released a four-volume Collector Edition, featuring new cover art for each volume illustrated by Qian Er Bai (千二百).[18] The actual text and story contents are identical to the 2016 version. A special Side Stories Edition book was released in February 2020. It contains the last four extra chapters that were added on the Jinjiang site in 2017–2018.[g]
Translations
[edit]Fan translations
[edit]Before licenses had been secured for the official release of foreign editions, fan-made translations of the novel had been instrumental in spreading Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation's fame internationally. Various groups had been formed by avid fans to provide valuable, free translations into several different languages, to be shared widely online. Each group had later willingly taken down these translation projects, as foreign publishers acquired the licenses for the novel's commercial release in their respective countries.
Official translations
[edit]As of July 2024[update], Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation has been officially translated into Vietnamese, Thai, Korean, Burmese, Hungarian, Russian, Japanese, German, English, Brazilian Portuguese, French, Italian and Spanish.
Official novel releases
[edit]Below is a table guide featuring the novel's official translations and editions so far:
Language | Title | Year | Translator | Cover artist/
illustrator |
Publisher | Media type | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese (Traditional) |
魔道祖師 Mó Dào Zǔ Shī (1st Print) |
2016 | Pinsin Studio (平心出版), New Taipei |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-986-5710-76-7 ISBN 978-986-5710-77-4 ISBN 978-986-5710-78-1 ISBN 978-986-5710-79-8 | ||
Chinese (Simplified) |
"无羁" Wújī |
2018 | Changyang (长阳RIN) |
Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House (四川文艺出版社), Sichuan |
Print (paperback), Audiobook |
ISBN 978-7-5411-5173-6 | |
Vietnamese |
"Ma Đạo Tổ Sư" | 2019 | Oải Hương Tím | Changyang (长阳RIN) |
Cẩm Phong, Hanoi |
Print (paperback & hardback) |
ISBN 978-604-970-675-2 ISBN 978-604-970-676-9 ISBN 978-604-55-4564-5 ISBN 978-604-55-4565-2 |
Chinese (Traditional) |
"魔道祖師" Mó Dào Zǔ Shī (Collector Edition) |
2019 | Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
Pinsin Studio (平心出版), New Taipei |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-986-494-130-8 ISBN 978-986-494-131-5 ISBN 978-986-494-132-2 ISBN 978-986-494-133-9 | |
Chinese (Traditional) |
"魔道祖師" Mó Dào Zǔ Shī (Side Stories Edition) |
2020 | Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
Pinsin Studio (平心出版), New Taipei |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-986-494-172-8 | |
Thai |
"ปรมาจารย์ลัทธิมาร" Prmācāry lạthṭhi mār |
2019-2020 | Alice (อลิส) |
Changyang (长阳RIN) |
Bakery Book, Bangkok |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-616-7477-48-0 ISBN 978-616-7477-54-1 ISBN 978-616-7477-58-9 ISBN 978-616-7477-64-0 ISBN 978-616-7477-70-1 ISBN 978-616-7477-71-8 |
Korean |
"마도조사" Ma Do Jo Sa |
2019-2020 | Lee Hyun-ah (이현아) |
Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
B-Lab, Seoul |
Print (paperback), E-book |
ISBN 979-11-278-5144-6 ISBN 979-11-278-5212-2 ISBN 979-11-278-5306-8 ISBN 979-11-278-5368-6 |
Burmese |
ေမွာ္နက္လမ္းစဥ္ အ႐ွင္သခင္ Lord of the Dark Paths (1st Print) |
2020 | Zheng Qin Yu (郑沁瑜) |
Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
Thousands Autumn, Naypyidaw |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-1-95236-901-8 ISBN 978-1-95236-902-5 ISBN 978-1-95236-903-2 |
Hungarian |
"A démoni kultiváció nagymestere" | 2020-2021 | Kiss Marcell | Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
Művelt Nép Könyvkiadó, Budapest |
Print (paperback) |
ISBN 978-615-6022-77-6 ISBN 978-615-6022-89-9 ISBN 978-615-6022-90-5 ISBN 978-615-6022-92-9 ISBN 978-615-6186-29-4 |
Russian |
"Магистр дьявольского культа" Magistr d'yavol'skogo kul'ta |
2020 | M.Kulishova (М Кулишова) |
Qian Er Bai (千二百)/ Marina Privalova |
Istari Comics, Moscow |
Print (hardback) |
ISBN 978-5-907340-00-8 ISBN 978-5-907340-01-5 ISBN 978-5-907340-02-2 ISBN 978-5-907340-03-9 |
Korean |
"마도조사" Ma Do Jo Sa (Re-cover version) |
2021 | Lee Hyun-ah (이현아) |
Raii | B-Lab, Seoul |
Print (paperback), E-book |
ISBN 979-11-278-5806-3 ISBN 979-11-278-5807-0 ISBN 979-11-278-5808-7 ISBN 979-11-278-5809-4 |
Japanese |
"魔道祖師" Ma Dō So Shi |
2021 | Zheng Yingxin (鄭穎馨) |
Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
Daria Series Uni, Tokyo |
Print (paperback), E-book |
ISBN 978-4-86657-412-7 ISBN 978-4-86657-413-4 ISBN 978-4-86657-414-1 ISBN 978-4-86657-415-8 |
German |
"The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | 2021-2023 | Nina Le | Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
TokyoPop, Hamburg |
Print (paperback & hardback), E-book |
ISBN 978-3-8420-7178-0 ISBN 978-3-8420-7179-7 ISBN 978-3-8420-7180-3 ISBN 978-3-8420-7181-0 ISBN 978-3-8420-8472-8 |
English |
"Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | 2021-2023 | Suika & Lianyin, Pengie (Editor) | Jin Fang/ Marina Privalova, moo, wenwen, minatu, idledee, ZeldaCW | Seven Seas Entertainment, Los Angeles |
Print (paperback), E-book |
ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5 ISBN 978-1-64827-920-1 ISBN 978-1-63858-301-1 ISBN 978-1-63858-156-7 ISBN 978-1-63858-549-7 |
Portuguese (BRA) |
"O Fundador da Cultivação Demoníaca" | 2022-ongoing | Sisi Qian | Qian Er Bai (千二百) |
NewPop, São Paulo |
Print (paperback) |
|
French |
"Le Grand Maître de la Cultivation Démoniaque" | 2022-ongoing | Audrey Simon | Qian Er Bai (千二百)/ Natalia Sorokina/ Marina Privalova, Akakumoeteru, Asis, Tiphs, Usako, Wusuo |
MXM Bookmark, Paris |
Print (paperback & hardback), E-book |
|
Burmese |
ေမွာ္နက္လမ္းစဥ္ အ႐ွင္သခင္္ Lord of the Dark Paths (2nd print) |
TBA | Zheng Qin Yu (郑沁瑜) |
Wusuo Yu (乌索Yu) |
Thousands Autumn, Naypyidaw |
Print (hardback) |
|
Italian |
"Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | TBA | TBA | Jin Fang | OscarVault, Segrate |
Print (paperback) |
|
Spanish |
"El Gran Maestro de la Cultivación Demoníaca" | 2024-ongoing | Javier Altayó | Qian Er Bai (千二百), Marina Privalova |
Norma Editorial, | Print (hardback & paperback) |
Adaptations
[edit]Web comic
[edit]A web comic (manhua) adaptation of the same name (Chinese: 魔道祖师; pinyin: Mó Dào Zǔ Shī; official English title: The Master of Diabolism), was officially distributed online by kuaikanmanhua (快看漫画) from December 8, 2017 until October 26, 2022, finishing with 259 chapters. It was co-created by Luo Di Cheng Qiu (落地成球) and Kuangfeng Chui Kudang (狂风吹裤裆).[19] The cover art for Volume 1 was illustrated by HAloggz.[20]
In 2019, the manhua won the silver award for Most Popular Web Comic Adaptation at the 16th China Animation Golden Dragon Award,[21] and the Best Manhua award at the China Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers Film Festival (1st Network Drama Awards).[22]
The first volume of the Mainland Simplified physical print version, titled “赤笛云琴记” (pinyin: Chì Dí Yún Qín Jì; English title: Memoirs of the Red Flute and the Heavenly Guqin) was published by China Radio and Television Press (中国广播影视出版社) in August 2020.[23]
Taiwan's Pinsin Studio handles the currently ongoing publication of the Traditional uncensored print version, using its original title (“魔道祖師”; Mó Dào Zǔ Shī), starting with the release of Volume 1 in September 2021.[24]
An official online English translation was available at WeComics website from October 18, 2019, to September 14, 2021. It ran up to chapter 197 before being discontinued. On November 19, 2021, all the chapters were removed due to WeComics finalizing its migration as Webnovel, which does not hold licenses for several manhua titles, including The Master of Diabolism.[h] Seven Seas Entertainment has since acquired the rights to the official English physical print version, with Volume 1 released in March 2023.[25]
The manhua's official online Korean translation was released from March 18, 2020 up to December 21, 2022. All the chapters are available on Lezhin Comics official website.[26]
Below is a table guide featuring the manhua's officially published printed editions so far:
Language | Title | Year | Publisher | Version |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese (Simplified) |
“赤笛云琴记” Chì Dí Yún Qín Jì Memoirs of the Red Flute and the Heavenly Guqin |
August 2020 - ongoing | China Radio and Television Press, Beijing |
Paperback, Censored |
Chinese (Traditional) |
“魔道祖師” Mó Dào Zǔ Shī |
September 2021 - ongoing[27] | Pinsin Studio (平心出版), New Taipei |
Paperback, Uncensored |
Russian |
"Основатель темного пути" Osnovatel Tjomnogo Puti Founder of the Dark Path |
August 2022 - ongoing[28] | Kom Federation, Moscow |
Hardback, Uncensored |
German |
"The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | November 2022 - ongoing[29] | TokyoPop, Hamburg |
Hardback & paperback, Uncensored |
Spanish |
"Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | December 2022 - ongoing[30] | Norma Editorial, Barcelona |
Paperback, Uncensored |
English |
"Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation" | March 2023 - ongoing[31] | Seven Seas Entertainment, Los Angeles |
Paperback, Uncensored |
Vietnamese |
"Ma Đạo Tổ Sư" | June 2023 - ongoing[32] | Daisy.Comics, Hanoi |
Paperback, Uncensored |
Portuguese (BRA) |
"Mo Dao Zu Shi: O Fundador da Cultivação Demoníaca" Mo Dao Zu Shi: The Founder of Demonic Cultivation |
January 2024 - ongoing[33] | NewPop, São Paulo |
Paperback, Uncensored |
Portuguese (POR) |
"Grão-mestre do Demonismo" Grandmaster of Demonism |
February 2024 - ongoing[34] | Editorial Presença, Lisbon |
Paperback, Uncensored |
French |
"Le Grand Maître de la Cultivation Démoniaque (Mo Dao Zu Shi)" | June 2024 - ongoing[35] | Komogi[36], Lyon[37] |
Paperback, Uncensored |
Audio drama
[edit]Mo Dao Zu Shi official audio drama was produced by Polar Penguin Studios (北斗企鹅工作室 制作) in collaboration with Sound Studio (寻声工作室), and supervised by the original novel's author Mo Xiang Tong Xiu. It encompasses three seasons and is broadcast on the Chinese audio streaming app MaoEr FM (猫耳FM).[38] It features voice actors Lu Zhixing (路知行) as Wei Wuxian and Wei Chao (魏超) as Lan Wangji.
The first season aired from June 8 to August 24, 2018, with a total of 12 episodes along with some extras. The second season aired from October 5, 2018, to April 5, 2019, with a total of 16 episodes along with some extras. The theme song for Season 1 up to mid Season 2 is "何以歌" (pinyin: Héyǐ gē;; lit. 'What To Sing'), performed by Aki (阿杰). Starting from Season 2 Episode 11, the theme song changed to "忘羡" (pinyin: Wàngxiàn;; lit. 'Forgetting Envies'). This is a duet between Lan Wangji and Wei Wuxian, and is performed by Wu En (吾恩) and Yu Xia (余夏). The third season aired from June 17 to December 29, 2019, with a total of 17 episodes along with some extras. The theme song for Season 3 is "人间纵我" (pinyin: Rénjiān zòng wǒ;; lit. 'Untamed as I am'), and is performed by Wu En and Yu Xia.
The audio drama features unique cover art for each episode, officially illustrated by various artists within the Mo Dao Zu Shi fandom. These include Higga, HAloggz, A-Xin (阿昕), Qian Er Bai (千二百), Changyang (长阳RIN), SpoonKid, Ma Que Su (麻雀酥), Qingshui Bai Taozi (清水白桃子), Zukiyn (坠), and mewkoala.
The audio drama was a critical and financial success, praised for its storyline, faithfulness to the source material, production value, and the voice actors' performances. It amassed hundreds of million playbacks across all three seasons, with each episode placing on top of the weekly rankings during their original run. The series has garnered over 600 million playbacks as of January 2023[update]. All three seasons still remain as the website's top 3 most listened to series in the overall ranking.
Mo Dao Zu Shi's audio drama OST boxset was released in 2020. The deluxe edition came with various merchandise, including: two official soundtrack CDs, an artbook featuring all the illustrated artworks produced for the show, a lyrics book, an autograph booklet with the staff members' personalized notes and signatures, a music box playing the audio drama version of the Wangxian theme song, postcards, badges, and a USB flash drive containing video and audio recordings of behind-the-scenes moments and voice performers' messages for fans.[i]
Japanese audio drama version
[edit]The audio drama's massive success and popularity led to it being brought over to Japan for a localized adaptation, produced by Brave Hearts and in close collaboration with the original Chinese audio drama team.[39] Known as “魔道祖師日本語版ラジオドラマ” (lit. "Ma Dō So Shi Japanese Radio Drama"), it started airing on January 24, 2020, and is simultaneously broadcast on the Japanese audio streaming app MiMi FM[40] and the Chinese audio streaming app MaoEr FM every Friday at 6pm Japan Standard Time (GMT 09:00). The show has broadcast up to the end of Season 2 as of December 2022[update].
The Japanese audio drama stars Tatsuhisa Suzuki as Wei Wuxian (Japanese: 魏無羨; romaji: Gi Musen) and Satoshi Hino as Lan Wangji (Japanese: 藍忘機; romaji: Ran Bouki).[41]
Physical CD boxsets get released every half season, containing the Japanese audio drama episodes and various special merchandise.[42]
Audiobook
[edit]An official Mo Dao Zu Shi audiobook was released by Ximalaya FM (喜马拉雅FM) from July to November 2019, consisting of 175 episodes with a total listening length of 47 hours and 16 minutes. Performance artist Zhang Zhen (张震), who also voices the character Jiang Fengmian in the Chinese audio drama, was specially invited to serve as the narrator.[43]
Animation
[edit]An animated (donghua) adaptation of the same name (Chinese: 魔道祖师; pinyin: Mó Dào Zǔ Shī; official English title: The Founder of Diabolism), was produced by Tencent Penguin Pictures and B.C May Pictures, in collaboration with 729 Voice Studio.[44] It premiered in China on Tencent Video on July 9, 2018, and concluded on October 16, 2021, with 35 episodes aired over three seasons.[45] It features Zhang Jie as Wei Wuxian and Bian Jiang (边江) as Lan Wangji.
The donghua version of the Wangxian song, titled "羡云" (pinyin: Xiànyún;; lit. 'Envying Clouds'), was originally sung by HITA and released in 2019. A duet version sung by Zhang Jie and Bian Jiang was released after the final episode. In the actual show, Lan Wangji reveals that the song's title is "忘羡" (pinyin: Wàngxiàn;; lit. 'Forgetting Envies'), in accordance with novel canon.
A chibi spin-off series, titled The Founder of Diabolism Q, aired from July 31, 2020 to January 29, 2021 for 30 episodes.[46] Most episodes are a light-hearted take on the events of the series, serving as re-imaginings or as gap fillers. Each episode runs for approximately 5 minutes.
Web series
[edit]The novel was adapted as a live action web series titled "陈情令" (pinyin: Chén Qíng Lìng; official English title: 'The Untamed'), produced by Tencent Penguin Pictures and New Style Media.[47] It stars Xiao Zhan as Wei Wuxian and Wang Yibo as Lan Wangji.[48] It aired in China on Tencent Video from June 27 to August 20, 2019 for 50 episodes; with two episodes every Thursday and Friday, before being changed to every Monday and Wednesday (GMT 08:00) starting July 1.[49] The theme song, sung by Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo, was titled "忘羡" (pinyin: Wàngxiàn;; lit. 'Forgetting Envies') before being renamed to "无羁" (pinyin: Wújī;; lit. 'Without Restraint').[50]
Mobile game
[edit]An upcoming Chinese mobile game, titled The Untamed, is slated for global release in 2022 and it will be available on iOS and Android. The news was announced via Weibo on October 30, 2019.[51] The game will be a card and visual novel style. As of 2023, there had been no news of release.
Reception
[edit]General
[edit]Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation has attracted a record readership on Jinjiang Literature City and in print, and the series as a whole with its various adaptations has drawn in a devoted and international fan base.
Within 24 hours of the August 4, 2021 announcement of her three novels' English release, pre-order sales for Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation were at #8 ranking on Amazon. On August 5, 2021, it was ranked #1 out of all Barnes & Noble Bestsellers.[j] For the next few days, it was Frontpage Trending along with MXTX's other two novels on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Fullybooked websites.[52]
Awards and recognitions
[edit]In February 2020, Mo Dao Zu Shi (Korean: 마도조사; Ma Do Jo Sa) was awarded the 'Rising Star Award' (뉴 스타상) by Ridibooks, the largest e-book service platform in South Korea. Ma Do Jo Sa was the only foreign work among the thirty novels to receive the award.
Upon the first volume's English release in December 2021, Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation debuted at #9 on The New York Times Best Seller list for Paperback Trade Fiction.[4] The second volume was released on May 17, 2022, and was announced to have hit the #8 ranking on May 25, 2022, dated for the June 5 print of The New York Times Book Review.[5]
In December 2021, Mo Dao Zu Shi (Japanese: 魔道祖師; Ma Dō So Shi) was awarded 1st place in the Best Novel category by “Kono BL Ga Yabai!," a BL guidebook released annually by NextFComics.[53] On the same month, it ranked #5 in the Novel Category during ComiComi of the Year 2021, held by ComiComi Studio, an online BL shop. The awards were given to the top 5 most supported works by customers.[54] In April 2022, it was ranked 2nd place as Best Novel during the 13th BL Award 2022, held by the Japanese BL information site “Chill Chill”.[55]
Fandom
[edit]Throughout much of its history, the size of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation's fan community was in the millions. Its success among the audience was built on the solid foundation of its plot and worldbuilding, the moral standards and messages it tries to promote, its themes, the complexities of its characters, and the appeal of its featured main couple 'Wangxian', based on their personality traits, relationship history, motifs surrounding their love story, and their romantic and sexual dynamics.[56][57]
Mo Dao Zu Shi's fan community within China is tremendous.[attribution needed] Fans create discourse, cosplay photoshoots, fanarts, and fanfictions—one of which gained enormous popularity and became the basis for the widespread fanon about Lan Wangji's "Thirteen Years of Inquiry," also later implied to be absorbed by some adaptations like the donghua and live action drama.
For the year 2020, the romantic relationship between Lan Wangji and Wei Wuxian was ranked #1 on fanfiction site Archive of Our Own's Top 100 list of pairings with the most newly written works.[8]
Legacy
[edit]“Although its popularity exists largely outside of English-language pop culture, MDZS (as it is called) is widely popular on a scale that most stories will never approach.” - Kali Wallace, (excerpt from a review article on tor.com)[57]
Though Mo Dao Zu Shi was not the first of its kind, the novel and its adaptations have been credited as significant influential factors in the emergence of the danmei genre in international fandom spaces.[58] The story's popularity and fan demand led to foreign publishers securing the license rights to translate and publish the novel, even in countries that have never been exposed to danmei stories. Mo Dao Zu Shi has become a “gateway,” its success leading the way for official foreign publications of more danmei novels.[59]
The novel's animated adaptation The Founder of Diabolism, with its strong audience ratings and critical acclaim, had been considerably influential in the increased international exposure to the Chinese animation industry.[60] Foreign viewers who were fans of Japanese anime discovered The Founder of Diabolism donghua upon its 2018 release and hailed it for its storyline and animation quality, and word-of-mouth eventually spread on MyAnimeList, Twitter, and Tumblr.[7]
Notes
[edit]- ^ The whole Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation franchise is more widely known and referred to by the international fandom by its original Chinese title Mo Dao Zu Shi (or MDZS).
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu is the author's pen name. Also known as MXTX by international fans, though she specified that she prefers the name “Moxiang,” hence the Chinese fandom mostly refers to her as MX. Mo Xiang Tong Xiu is translated as 'Ink Fragrance and Copper Smell'.
- ^ Jinjiang Literature City is also more commonly known by the acronym JJWXC ('Jinjiang Wenxuecheng').
- ^ 'Wangxian' is the portmanteau of Lan Wangji's and Wei Wuxian's courtesy names. Also their official ship name and the canonical title of their love song.
- ^ The actual term in the novel for Wei Wuxian's cultivation is 'Ghost Path' (鬼道, guǐ dào), not 'Demonic Path' (魔道; mó dào) which was used to refer to him only once in the whole novel, when Wei Wuxian was reminiscing to the title given to him by the cultivation world.[15] It is an established fact in this setting that ghosts and demons are different creatures.[9] Wei Wuxian wields resentful energy from ghosts and corpses—already dead people—while imitators who come after him also use living people to manipulate as puppets and/or to consume their lives.[16]
- ^ The four side stories (or “extra chapters”) included in the 2016/2019 Taiwan edition (the version followed by most foreign editions, including English) are as follows: Family Banquet, Incense Burner Part 1 and 2 (combined into one chapter), Villainous Friends, From Dawn to Dusk.
- ^ The remaining four chapters printed on the Special Side Stories Edition (usually the “fifth book” in most foreign editions): Intrusion, Metal Hook, Lotus Seed Pod, Dream Come True.
- ^ The WeComics website is now terminated.
- ^ Neither regular nor deluxe edition boxset contains the actual episodes of the Chinese audio drama. They are officially available solely online on Maoer FM app/missevan website.
- ^ Barnes & Noble is the biggest physical bookstore chain in America.
Works cited
[edit]- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2021-12-14). Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, Volume 1. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5.
- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2022-05-17). Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, Volume 2. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-920-1.
- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2022-08-16). Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, Volume 3. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-63858-156-7.
- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2019-08-26). 魔道祖師 Mo Dao Zu Shi (Collector Edition), 4 Volumes. Pinsin Studio.
- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2020-02-18). 魔道祖師 Mo Dao Zu Shi (Side Stories). Pinsin Studio. ISBN 978-986-494-172-8.
- Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2018-12-08). 无羁 Wuji. Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House. ISBN 978-7-5411-5173-6.
References
[edit]Primary
[edit]Secondary
[edit]- ^ a b c "Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation genres by Seven Seas Entertainment". Seven Seas Entertainment.
- ^ Novel Updates. "Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation genres". novelupdates.com. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
- ^ a b "MXTX Page on Jinjiang Literature City". www.jjwxc.net (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ a b "Paperback Trade Fiction Books - Best Sellers - Books - Jan. 2, 2022 - The New York Times". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ a b "Paperback Trade Fiction Book - Best Sellers - Books - June 5, 2022 - The New York Times". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 25, 2022.
- ^ Wilson, Angel (2020-01-31). "Lan Wangji The Forklift: The Surprising Intersection of Fandom & The Coronavirus". thegeekiary.com. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ a b Viri, Beatrice (2020-12-12). "How a Chinese BL Series Became a Bigger Hit on Tumblr Than Demon Slayer". cbr.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ a b Wilson, Angel (2021-01-04). "Congrats to WangXian, AO3's Most Popular Ship of 2020". thegeekiary.com. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ a b Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2021-12-14). "04". The Elegant Flirt. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 01. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2022-05-17). "10". The Beguiling Boy. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 02. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-920-1.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2019-08-26). "89". Loyalty. Mo Dao Zu Shi (2019 Traditional Edition). Vol. 04. Pinsin Studio. ISBN 978-986-494-133-9.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2021-12-14). "01". Reincarnation. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 01. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2019-08-26). "92". Longing. Mo Dao Zu Shi (2019 Traditional Edition). Vol. 04. Pinsin Studio. ISBN 978-986-494-133-9.
- ^ a b c Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2021-12-14). "03". The Prideful. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 01. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2021-12-14). "02". The Intractable. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 01. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-919-5.
- ^ Mo Xiang Tong Xiu (2022-05-17). "08". The Stalk of Grass. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation. Vol. 02. Seven Seas Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-64827-920-1.
- ^ Jinjiang Literature City. "MXTX'S page on Jinjiang Literature City". jjwxc.net (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-16.
- ^ YESASIA. "Mo Dao Zu Shi Volume 1 (New Edition)". yesasia.com. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ kuaikanmanhua. "Mo Dao Zu Shi on kuikanmanhua". kuaikanmanhua.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Koul, Sarthak (2021-09-08). "The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation (Mo Dao Zu Shi Manhua) Read All 200 Chapters of One of the Best Chinese Manga". pathofex.com. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ Tencent Video Industry (2019-09-09). "China Animation Golden Dragon Award Mo Dao Zu Shi Silver Award". sohu.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-13.
- ^ Wilson, Angel (2019-12-18). "Recommendation: Mo Dao Zu Shi/The Untamed". thegeekiary.com. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ merchieshq. "MDZS Simplified manhua Volume 1". merchieshq.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Pinsin Studio. "MDZS Traditional uncensored manhua Volume 1 by Pinsin Studio coming in September 2021". pinsinstudio.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Seven Seas Entertainment (2022-12-21). "Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation: Mo Dao Zu Shi (The Comic/Manhua)". sevenseasentertainment.com. Retrieved 2022-12-21.
- ^ Lezhin Comics (2022-12-21). Mo Dao Zu Shi online manhua in Korean (in Korean). Retrieved 2022-12-21.
- ^ Pinsin Studio. "Mo Dao Zu Shi Taiwan version latest volume". Retrieved 2023-05-02.
- ^ Store "28th" (2022-06-22). "Founder of the Dark Path (Pre-order)". 28oi.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-06-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Manga Passion (2022-08-06). "License: The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation Webtoon published by TOKYOPOP in German" (in German). Retrieved 2022-08-08.
- ^ Norma Editorial (2023-05-02). "Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation Manhua Series in Spanish". Retrieved 2023-05-02.
- ^ Seven Seas Entertainment (2022-05-25). "Brand-new license announcement: Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation Mo Dao Zu Shi (manhua/comic)". sevenseasentertainment.com. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
- ^ Daisy.Comics (2023-06-26). "Translation announcement: MDZS manhua Viet version". Facebook (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2023-07-02.
- ^ Xiu, Mo Xiang Tong; Qiu, Luo di Cheng (2024-01-10). Mo Dao Zu Shi: Comics - Volume 01 (1ª edição ed.). NewPOP. ISBN 978-85-8362-346-5.
- ^ "Grão-mestre do Demonismo 1". Grupo Editorial Presença. Retrieved 2024-02-12.
- ^ "Le Grand Maître de la Cultivation Démoniaque volume 1". Nautiljon (in French). Retrieved 2024-10-16.
"Le Grand Maître de la Cultivation Démoniaque". Nautiljon (in French). Retrieved 2024-10-16. - ^ "komogi.com". Komogi website (in French). Retrieved 2024-10-16.
- ^ "Siège social Komogi". annuaire-entreprises.data.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 2024-10-16.
- ^ Maoer FM. "MDZS Audio Drama Page on Maoer FM". missevan.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Mimi FM Blackboard (2021-01-01). "New Year Special Interview with Tatsuhisa Suzuki and the MDSS Audio Drama Production Team". mimifm.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-12.
- ^ Mimi FM. "Ma Do So Shi Japanese Radio Drama Information". mimifm.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Starra. "Ma Do So Shi official Japanese audio drama cast". anime-planet.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Mimi FM Blackboard. "Ma Do So Shi official radio drama physical CD boxsets information page". mimifm.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ Ximalaya FM. "Official Mo Dao Zu Shi Audiobook Announcement and Information". Ximalaya FM (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-10.
- ^ 729 Voice Studio. "MDZS donghua official Chinese dubbing team". 729voice.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Tencent. "MDZS official donghua episodes". v.qq.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ TV Maze. "The Founder of Diabolism Q Episodes". tvmaze.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Sina Ent (2018-03-13). "Chen Qing Ling production announcement". ent.sina.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ IFeng Ent (2018-07-05). "Chen Qingling first exposed stills of Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo". ent.ifeng.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Slide Ent (2019-06-27). "组图:突如其来!《陈情令》定档627 肖战王一博最新海报曝光 Latest Character Posters". slide.ent.sina.com.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ People CN (2019-07-08). "《陈情令》国风音乐专辑重磅上线 肖战王一博"声动"诠释角色内心 The Untamed OST info". ent.people.com.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ "头条文章". card.weibo.com. Retrieved 2023-12-14.
- ^ Pradhan, Aaheli (2021-08-06). "Seven Seas Licenses MXTX's Big Three Novels as Preorder Records Shatter!". epicdope.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Daria Series Uni (2021-12-13). "Ma Do So Shi #1 on Best Novel Category by Kono Ga Yabai!". fwinc.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ ComiComi (2021-12-24). "COMICOMI OF THE YEAR 2021 Winners". comicomi-studio.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-15.
- ^ Chill Chill (2022-04-01). "Ma Do So Shi #2 on Best Novel category on 13th BL Award 2022". chil-chil.net (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Mandelo, Lee (2022-01-13). "A Delicious Layer Cake of Tragedy and Romance: Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu". tor.com. Retrieved 2022-05-18.
- ^ a b Wallace, Kali (2022-01-04). "From Now on I'm Taking All of My Storytelling Lessons From This Wild Epic About Love, Loyalty, and Necromancy". tor.com. Archived from the original on 2023-05-21. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Lima, Tori (2022-01-13). "Danmei, a Chinese Version of the BL Genre, Is Proving Its Popularity Among Wider Audiences". hornet.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Ponders, Angle (3 November 2020). "The Works of Mo Xiang Tong Xiu Masterpost". thegeekiary.com. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
- ^ Zhao, Xiaohong (2019-08-31). "China's 'Mo Dao Zu Shi' Attracts Anime Fans from Around the World". acnnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 2022-05-11.
External links
[edit]- 2016 Chinese novels
- 2016 LGBTQ-related literary works
- Novels by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu
- Novels set in ancient China
- Seven Seas Entertainment titles
- Xianxia novels
- Danmei novels
- Chinese romance novels
- Mystery novels
- Wuxia novels
- Chinese fantasy novels
- Chinese adventure novels
- Chinese erotic novels
- Chinese novels adapted into television series
- 2010s LGBTQ novels
- Novels first published online
- Manhua titles