No definitive official translation I know of. The title's too generic. I'd need the author's name or original Chinese title to be sure. Some aggregator sites claim 'official' in their tags, but that's usually junk. If you're desperate to read it, you might find a fan translation on a blog or forum, but it'll be a hunt for sure.
Ugh, I fell into this rabbit hole last year. There's a 'Dragon Master' about taming mythical beasts in a modern setting that had a semi-official translation on BoxNovel for a while, but I think it got taken down or stalled. The translation was decent, but updates became monthly, then just stopped at chapter 120-something. The comment section was a graveyard of people begging for more.
Nowadays, you might find pieces of it on NovelFull or similar reader sites, but those are almost definitely unauthorized scrapes. The text gets weird formatting and missing paragraphs sometimes. It's a shame because the core idea was fun—dragons in a corporate office satire kind of thing—but without a steady official release, it's hard to get invested.
I'm not aware of a current, complete official English translation for any prominent novel specifically titled 'Dragon Master.' The landscape for these Chinese webnovels is so fragmented. A story might be officially translated under a slightly different English name, or a platform might have the rights but only for a specific region, locking it behind a geo-block.
Your best chance is to check the major legal platforms systematically: Webnovel (by Qidian), Wuxiaworld, Novel Updates' licensed list. Even if it's not there now, it could get picked up later; that happens a lot. I remember 'Library of Heaven's Path' wasn't on any official site for ages, then suddenly it popped up on Webnovel with a consistent schedule. For now, reading it online in English likely means encountering unofficial sources, which I try to avoid because the translations can ruin the pacing and jokes.
Honestly, the main thing you've got is 'Dragon Master' which is a crazy common title in webnovel spaces. I've clicked into at least three different stories called that on various apps. The one people might be asking about is probably the xianxia or fantasy city-building one by Smiling Proud Wanderer or a similar author? It's a total maze.
If there's an official translation, it'd almost certainly be on Webnovel or maybe Wuxiaworld since they lock down a lot of those licenses. But I checked both a few months back for a friend and didn't see a title exactly matching that in their official catalogs. A bunch of fan-translated chapters float around on aggregate sites, but the quality is usually all over the place, and they rarely finish the whole story. You might find the first fifty chapters cleanly translated before it drops into machine-translation gibberish.
My advice is to search the Chinese title or author name if you can find it; that's the only reliable way to track down an official version. Otherwise, you're in for a frustrating scroll through a dozen dead links.
2026-07-13 19:36:06
2
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Way of the Dragon
Meng Xun Qian Gu
9.7
358.9K
Zephyr Khan, the King of Alchemy, was reborn in his youth. He took the Ancient Draconic Way to refine his body and cultivate supreme sword skills! In this life, he was destined to ascend to the top of martial arts, Even the most gifted one was inferior to him!
Humans? A low-level world? No cultivators or gods? Could that world be trampled as easily as ants by the powerful beings from above? This is Long Chen's new journey after being reborn from the flames of the Vermilion Bird, emerging to fight against powerful cultivators who always use low-level worlds as their slaves and playthings. He also discovers the evils of the world and the people who rule over these various worlds. Protecting, destroying, and shaping are Long Chen's new goals. This journey brings Long Chen into contact with various powerful cultivators and even those called gods. Fighting, defeating, protecting—all of these are already in Long Chen's heart. He will also meet his parents, whom he has never seen since the day he was born. Will Long Chen accept them? Or will Long Chen decide to have nothing to do with them anymore? Can Long Chen maintain his purpose, or will he fall once again into the same temptation as the black dragon? "I live for myself, fate? Fate cannot stop me! I will keep standing no matter how many times I fall. As long as I still breathe, there is no such thing as giving up in my life."
Humans? A low-level world? No cultivators or gods? Can the world be trampled on like ants by the strongmen of the upper realms? This is Long Chen's new journey after being reborn from the flames of the Vermilion Bird to fight against the strong cultivators who have always used the lower worlds as their slaves and playthings. And discover the ugly worlds and the people who are the rulers of those worlds. Protecting, destroying, and shaping are Long Chen's new goals.
A journey in which Long Chen met various powerful cultivators and even so-called gods. Fighting, defeating, protecting, it's all in Long Chen's heart. He will also meet his parents, whom he hasn't seen since the day he was born. Would Long Chen accept them? Or will he decide to have nothing to do with them? Can Long Chen maintain his goal, or will he once again fall into the same temptation as the Black Dragon?
"I live for myself, destiny? Fate cannot stop me! I'll keep standing no matter how many times I fall. As long as I'm still breathing, there will be no surrender in my life.
What exactly does it mean to be his bride?
***
Every year, in each of the seven villages that made up the great Kingdom of Ignas, a Choosing Ritual was conducted. During this Chosing Ritual, one of the ladies in the village would be chosen to be the dreaded Dragon King's Bride.
No one knew exactly why the ritual was being performed every year or what happened to the brides that had been chosen in the past.
Was he turning them into slaves?
Feeding them to his dragon?
Or was he... feeding on them?
That couldn't be ruled out. After all, there were rumours that the king wasn't like them, that he wasn't human.
Yet the question relentlessly troubled the people's heart.
What was he using them for?!
But they dared not question the King, afraid of what fate daring to go against him would be.
Anyways, none of these was Belladonna's business. Although it was her village's turn to produce a bride this year, she was certain she wouldn't get chosen.
Why?
Well, because she had a plan and she was absolutely certain it wouldn't fail her... or would it?
The Empire rules on the wings of dragons. Riders are hand-selected for training from childhood, and Anzi is one of the rare few who wait to hatch theirs this year. Until she discovers the terrible truth that the dragon riders are not partners with their dragons: they're slavers. The dragons are bred in captivity and enslaved from within the egg, and they are nothing but mindless shadows of what their once-noble species used to be.
After two hundred years, the surviving dragons in the wild are coming back to rescue their brethren. How they survived the Purge, no one knows, but they are angry and they are coming, in fire and in storm. And as she struggles to come to terms with the realization that the nation she loves so much that she would give her life for it may be nothing more than propaganda and illusion, she discovers something else:
The dragons who survived the Purge are shifters, able to hide in human form. And Anzi has met one of them already.
Her mate.
Amelia is a shy girl who had been sheltered by her parents all her life. She stumbled on an injured man one day and decided to help him. She later fell in love with the man, but he suddenly disappeared into thin air.
All the young girls are asked to come to the palace so that the Dragon king would choose his bride, and when Amelia gets there, she finds out that the man she had threaten is none other than the Dragon king.
Alaric tried to make it up to Amelia for what he had done, so she forgave him after a while and their love began to blossom. Just then, oppositions start to come up and try to tear their love apart.
Will Alaric and Amelia be able to face their problems together, or will it tear them apart?
It's not consistent at all, and that's honestly the most frustrating part. For about three months last year, new chapters dropped almost every other day. Now? Sometimes you're lucky to get one a week. I check my reader app daily out of habit, and half the time it's a re-run of the last chapter or some notification about a live stream event instead of actual story progress.
There's no official schedule pinned anywhere that I've found, which forces you to rely on fan forums for updates. People there often cite the author's weibo for hints about health issues or other projects causing delays. The translation team tries to stick to a 'three times a week' promise, but they're at the mercy of the raw release, so their schedule falls apart too. I've started stockpiling chapters for a month before binging just to avoid the constant disappointment of hitting the 'next chapter' button only to find nothing new.
It's a fantastic story, but the erratic pace makes it hard to stay emotionally invested week-to-week.
Just finished the latest raws on WuxiaWorld and went down a rabbit hole comparing access points. If you want a consistent free experience, official translations are tricky for that title—it's locked behind a pretty aggressive paywall on Webnovel after the first thirty chapters. I found an aggregator site with a complete fan-translated version, but the quality dropped off around chapter two hundred, with some real head-scratcher lines.
Honestly, the most reliable method I've settled on is using the Webnovel app for the first arc, then switching to a subscription for a month to binge the parts I really care about. It's a pain, but the fan forums sometimes have downloadable EPUBs of older translations if you know where to look, though those can vanish without warning. I still haven't found a perfect, permanent free source that doesn't feel like a gamble every time the page loads.
I'd probably steer clear of most general-purpose reading apps for something as niche as that. Tried a bunch last year, and the official translations are almost always behind the original webnovel platforms.
You might have better luck checking out the dedicated sites that serialize these cultivation stories directly. A lot of them have decent mobile sites that function like apps. The comment sections are half the fun anyway, seeing other readers freak out about power-ups. The official 'Dragon Master' pages on platforms like Webnovel or NovelFull usually have the most stable updates, even if you hit a paywall after a few dozen chapters.
I ended up just bookmarking the browser version on my phone. It's less polished than an app, but at least I know I'm getting the primary source.