The main thing you need to know is there's a 'core' novel called 'The King's Avatar' (sometimes 'Quan Zhi Gao Shou'), which is the original web serial by Butterfly Blue. That's the one you start with, no question. It follows Ye Xiu getting kicked from his pro team and starting over from scratch on a new server. After that, it gets a bit messy because there are prequel stories published later that dive into his early career.
I'd recommend reading the core novel first, all 1728 chapters (yes, it's a commitment). Once you're completely done, then you can circle back to 'The King's Avatar: For the Glory', which is the prequel covering his first pro years and the origins of Team Excellent Era. Trying to read 'For the Glory' first would ruin a lot of the mystery and impact of the main story.
There's also an ongoing sequel called 'The King's Avatar 2: Tournament of the Challengers' that continues after the Glory Pro Alliance finals, but it's still being written and translated. So the order is main novel, prequel, then wait for the sequel like the rest of us, refreshing translation sites every few days.
Honestly, the reading order debates in the fandom can be way overcomplicated. Start with the main 'The King's Avatar' webnovel. Everything else is supplementary. The prequel 'For the Glory' is interesting for lore, but it was written after the fact and assumes you already know who Ye Xiu is and why his past matters. Jumping into it first would be like watching the Star Wars prequels first—you lose the weight of the reveals.
Some people suggest reading the prequel after the All-Star challenge arc in the main story, but I disagree. The main novel's pacing is deliberate, and dropping it for a flashback breaks the momentum. Just power through the long haul. The manhua and donghua adaptations follow the main novel's plot, so they're fine to watch alongside or after, but they cut a ton of the gaming mechanics and inner monologue that make the novel so satisfying for strategy nerds.
I see a lot of new readers get tripped up by the different titles. The series started as 'Quan Zhi Gao Shou' (The King's Avatar) online. That's the one. The physical published versions in Chinese sometimes have different volume splits, but the content order is the same. Read that from chapter one to the end. Then, and only then, tackle 'For the Glory'. It's a collection of short stories from the 'professional league early years' era, focusing on the old Team Excellent Era lineup.
It's rewarding because you finally get the full context for Ye Xiu's relationship with Su Mucheng and Wu Xuefeng, and you see the betrayal from a different angle. But it hits harder when you've already spent 1700 chapters with the present-day Ye Xiu. There's also a short 'Blessed' side story about a side character, but it's non-essential. The sequel 'Tournament of the Challengers' is directly continuous, but the translation pace is slow, so brace for a wait after you finish the main mountain of text.
Basic order: 1) 'The King's Avatar' main story. 2) 'The King's Avatar: For the Glory' prequel. 3) The ongoing 'The King's Avatar 2' sequel when you're caught up. Don't overthink it. The prequel novels and the side story 'Blessed' are extra material you can read whenever after finishing the core plot. The translations for the sequel are still catching up, so you'll have plenty of time.
Main novel first, absolutely. The entire narrative is built on you discovering Ye Xiu's past alongside the new friends he makes. Reading the prequel first spoils that slow unveiling of his legend. The prequel 'For the Glory' is a nice bonus for superfans hungry for more after the main story ends. The sequel is still coming out, so you'll be joining the rest of us in the perpetual waiting cycle. That's the whole order.
2026-07-15 15:41:16
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The Dragon King's Claim
Aurora Lee
10
8.7K
The world ended the day the shifters revealed themselves. Dragons, wolves and other beasts from legend rose from the ashes of civilization and divided the ruins of the old world into brutal new kingdoms. Humans were spared- but only barely. Stripped of power, pushed into the center territories, and treated as lesser, they became a resource instead of a race.
And now they are needed.
Seraphina has survived her entire life by being invisible, a shadow, a rumor. Orphaned young, she learned fast that strength meant staying alive -and trust was a luxury she couldn't afford. In a world where humans are bartered and bred to strengthen shifter bloodlines, Seraphina has no intention of becoming anyone's prize.
Until the prince of dragons befriends her, dragging her into a world of molten stone, deadly politics and people willing to kill her the knowledge she obtains. To keep her safe, Prince Kaelith takes her to the King's Castle.
King Micah, ruler of the Western Skies, is everything that the world fears -merciless, untouchable, and bound by a fate written in fire. Everything that Seraphina has spent her life avoiding.
Yet the bond ignites the moment he touches her.
Claimed by the most powerful shifter alive, Seraphina's own secret paints an even larger target on her back.
As tensions rise between shifter kingdoms and whispers of rebellion spread through the human territories, Seraphina must decide who she is willing to become: a pawn in a broken world, or the queen standing beside the dragon who burn it all down for her. Because fate chose her for a reason. and the world is about to remember what happens when even a dragon falls in love.
In a world where the werewolf kingdom is on the brink of war, the Alpha King is forced to offer one of his daughters hands in marriage in exchange for peace.
When Princess Xendaya finds out that her younger sister has agreed to wed the Dragon King - a beast who is known for his callous, ruthless and deadly nature - she decides to take her place, making the ultimate sacrifice and signing away her freedom.
Far from home and her people, will the head-strong werewolf princess survive in the kingdom of beasts? A place that is far worse than she thought. Her new husband is not only dangerous but has the sexual appetite of a hundred men. How will Xendaya cope knowing that her king has a harem and has no shortage of women?
Agnarr, the Ruthless, is a merciless leader who has his eyes on a throne that he feels is his birthright, thrusting his people into the claws of full-out war and carnage. Will he continue to bottle his pain, rage, and hatred within him or allow his new queen to help guide him?
How will Xendaya cope when her so-called husband turns his gaze upon her, his newest possession?
How will Agnarr react when he realises he wants a taste of his new wife?
And how will she remain strong and not succumb to her Dragon King's seduction?
In a clash of wills, passion and desire, will the threat that hangs above them allow them to give in? Or will it simply drive them apart?
~~~
The sequel to The Alpha King's Possession
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Lamia and Kellen return to a realm different from what they left. Overrun with Senko’s creations and monsters from the underworld, they have one goal as they struggle to come to terms with their new identities.
To rid the realm of Aodh and send him back to the hell hole he came from.
They had faced Aodh once before in their past lives. This time round is different. They remember everything and hope they can defeat him this time. Not just for their future but the future of their realm.
Love and bonds need to be healed while they prepare for a war that could cost them everything. Determined to ensure a peaceful future, Queen Lamia will stop at nothing to ensure the god of the underworld doesn’t get his hands on her or her immortal child.
The Lycan King: Alpha of All Alphas ( The Hybrid Series)
Peaches9802
6
4.7K
Aidan Stone is considered the most powerful lycan in existance who rules the kingdom with an iron fist, but he loves his family and close friends. He acended the throne at age 119 after his father was killed in battle when the one who called himsrlf the Rogue King and othe Alphas rebelled. What happens when tbe ones you love and trust betray you and you awake a thousand years later to a world long gone and loaded with secrets?
If you don't find your mate by the age of 17, you will be forced into slavery. Your fate is decided by The Alpha King. My name is Brinley James, I'm 17 and due to rejection: I am mate-less, or I should say... Slave No. 508.
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THIS IS THE ALPHA KINGS SLAVE rewrite
BOOK TWO, THE ALPHA KING'S CURSED MATE
I HOPE YOU ALL ENJOY THE REWRITE UPDATE DATES WILL BE POSTED SOON
UPDATES WILL BE ON MONDAYS FRIDAYS AND SUNDAYS
WARNING
MAY BE SPELLING ERRORS BUT REST ASSURE I WILL FIX THEM.
Ava grew up with no single knowledge of her werewolf inherited genes. Out of all the things she ever dreamt of becoming, a werewolf wasn't one of them and much less a princess who was charged with the duty of leading her lycan clan to eliminate a rogue king who made her an orphan before she could walk.
The reading order for 'The King's Avatar' can be a bit of a puzzle since it's grown across webnovel chapters, physical volumes, and even a manhua adaptation. If you want to follow the main narrative from the start, the most straightforward path is to begin with the original webnovel. That story unfolds chronologically across its 1,728 chapters on sites like Webnovel. You read from Chapter 1 all the way through to the end, and that's the complete journey of Ye Xiu's return to the pro scene and Team Happy's rise.
Where it gets interesting is with the published volumes. The physical books, often translated as 'The King's Avatar', repackage those webnovel chapters into numbered volumes. So, you'd simply start with Volume 1 and proceed numerically. The manhua and the fantastic live-action drama, 'The King's Avatar', are adaptations that cover major arcs but naturally condense and sometimes reorder events for their medium. They're fantastic companions, but for the full, unabridged detail and internal monologue that makes the gaming strategies so brilliant, the webnovel or its volume equivalents are the definitive source.
I'd recommend sticking to the core novel sequence first to avoid spoilers and to fully appreciate the character development and intricate esports world-building. The adaptations shine brightest when you already know the beats and can enjoy their visual or dramatic interpretation. The sheer length of the story means you'll be living in that universe for a good while, watching the relationships and battles evolve chapter by satisfying chapter.
The 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' books, often referred to as the graphic novel trilogies, expand the universe after the original series. The first trilogy is 'The Promise,' which picks up right where the show left off, dealing with the aftermath of the war and Aang's struggles to balance his duties. Next comes 'The Search,' diving into Zuko's quest to find his mother—this one’s packed with emotional depth and family secrets. 'The Rift' follows, exploring Aang’s connection to his past and tensions between tradition and progress. After that, 'Smoke and Shadow' delves into Fire Nation politics and Zuko’s leadership challenges, while 'North and South' focuses on Katara and Sokka’s homeland conflicts. The final trilogy, 'Imbalance,' wraps up with industrial revolution themes in the Earth Kingdom. Each book builds on character arcs and world-building, so reading them in order is key to appreciating the growth.
I love how these graphic novels feel like an extension of the show—same humor, heart, and moral complexities. The art style shifts slightly between trilogies, but the spirit of the original stays intact. If you’re a fan of the series, skipping any would mean missing out on crucial character moments, like Toph’s metalbending school or Sokka’s diplomatic efforts.