In the endless darkness, Long Xuan woke up in shock from a dream.
"Where is this?"
He looked around in confusion, his brows furrowed.
What he saw was a cluttered bedroom with a musty smell lingering in the air.
When his eyesnded on a bronze mirror on the table, the reflection of a handsome fifteen or sixteen-year-old boy appeared in his vision.
He quickly realized that he had transmigrated. Soon, a flood of unfamiliar memories surged into his mind, further confirming his suspicion.
This was a strange world simr to one of cultivation, with pills, artifacts, formations, talismans, beast taming, insect control, sword control, puppetry...
The boy practiced Gu insect cultivation and lived in a region inhabited by other Gu cultivators. People in this area gained powerful strength by raising and refining Gu insects.
A Gu, as it was called, involved cing different types of spiritual insects in a container and letting them kill each other.Over time, there was a chance that a more powerful new insect species would emerge.
These new insect species, born from this method, were called Gu insects. Gu insects could not reproduce and could only be obtained through refining.
Depending on the types and quantities of spiritual insects in the container, there were countlessbinations.
Differentbinations produced different Gu insects, varying in shape, strength, and abilities, some bizarre and unpredictable.
Broadly, they could be categorized into two types: external Gu, which wererger and used for externalbat, and internal Gu, which were smaller and could parasitize the Gu cultivator''s body, providing the cultivator with various miraculous abilities like breathing fire and summoning lightning. Internal Gu offered numerous abilities by growing within the cultivator''s body and feeding off its nutrients.
Some internal Gu were harmful rather than beneficial to the cultivator and could be secretly ced in an enemy''s food, making them hard to detect and almost impossible to guard against. Those affected would often die as the Gu ate their internal organs.
It was noteworthy that manybinations failed to produce Gu insects, and those that did produce powerful Gu were extremely rare.
Gu cultivators recorded sessfulbinations on paper, turning them into Gu recipes that could be passed down through generations.
A Gu recipe was the foundation of a family''s enduring prosperity and their most important asset.
Each family guarded their Gu recipes as treasures, never sharing them.
Therefore, for ordinary people, learning Gu recipes was extremely difficult.
The original owner of Long Xuan''s body was a poor, ordinary person working as aborer in a medicinal garden to earn a meager ie, with no opportunity to learn Gu recipes.
The original owner, also named Long Xuan, was of low status, orphaned since childhood, and was born with a "golden finger," a typical protagonist trait.
However, to the original owner, this golden finger seemed useless, leading to a life of poverty and struggle despite having it.
Upon seeing these memories, Long Xuan couldn''t help but frown.
A useless golden finger? Unheard of! After reading countless novels, it was the first time he''d encountered such a situation.
This protagonist''s golden finger was not a system but merely the ability to see the growth of all things.
This was its only function—just seeing, without the ability to alter anything. Apart from visualizing a number, it had no practical use.
At first nce, it indeed seemed useless, as spiritual beasts and insects could have their growth assessed by their size, and there were many ways to determine the age of medicinal herbs. It didn''t really need his ability to identify them.
Long Xuan fell into deep thought. ording to the memories, this ability allowed him to see the growth progress of all things in the world, not just living things.
It seemed that any named entity, living or non-living, could have its growth progress seen.
However, using the term "growth" for non-living things seemed inurate. Long Xuan preferred a modern term, calling it "progress" instead.
While the original owner thought this ability was useless, Long Xuan disagreed. He believed this ability had great potential for development.
There are no useless golden fingers, only useless hosts—it all depended on the host''s creativity.
As a transmigrator, creativity was something he didn''tck. Soon, many fantastic ideas appeared in his mind.
He quickly got out of bed and went to the desk, taking out paper and a pen from the drawer. He wrote the characters "Gu Recipe" at the top of the paper and then listed a material called "Ghost Spider" below it.
As expected, the paper showed a progress rate, but instead of the previous form of 10% or 20%, it disyed as numbers from his previous life. It was clear that the golden finger''s disy format was based on the host''s cognition.
At this moment, a number "1.5%" appeared in his vision.
Long Xuan pondered. ording to his guess, iplete recipes were also a kind of entity and could naturally have their progress seen.
The progress of a Gu recipe evidently represented its degree ofpleteness.
The moreplete the recipe, the higher the progress; the more iplete, the lower.
However, a recipe missing only 1% could still be called iplete, as could one missing all but one material.
Thus, it was simple. Faking an iplete recipe with just one material wouldn''t be difficult.
He just needed to randomly guess a recipe with a visible progress rate and then continue writing down materials he thought were correct.
If the progress disappeared, it meant the guess was wrong, and he would erase it and try another material.
If the progress increased, it meant the guess was right, and he could continue guessing.
Once he reached 100%, it meant he had sessfully created aplete Gu recipe.
He deliberately wrote down an insect species from his previous life on the paper and could still see the progress. This indicated that the golden finger''s standard for iplete recipes included those theoretically existing.
In other words, he could create new Gu recipes with this golden finger, inventing Gu species that didn''t yet exist in this world.
With no trial-and-error cost, researching Gu recipes only required paper and pen. Creating new Gu recipes was just a matter of time.
Having two lifetimes of strong soul and highprehension,bined with his previous life as an entomologist, he was confident that he could use his past knowledge and creativity to develop extraordinary Gu recipes and shine in this world.
Long Xuan was now extremely excited and full of expectations for the future. After studying his golden finger a while longer, he finally opened the door and headed to the medicinal garden where the original owner worked.
Refining Gu required a significant amount of initial funds, and this medicinal garden might be his first source of wealth.
The garden belonged to an old Gu cultivator named Long, whom outsiders called Elder Long.[1]
Elder Long came from a Gu cultivator family named Long and was stationed in a vige called Great Stone Vige, protecting it from spirit beast invasions and demon cultivator bandits.
In return, Great Stone Vige had to provide more than half of its food, including meat and eggs.
There were countless viges under the control of the Long family.
In this world, Gu cultivators didn''t farm. They only practiced cultivation, didn''t engage in production, and had enormous appetites. Their food supply came solely from various mortal viges.
Gu cultivator families provided protection for mortal viges, and in return, the vigers provided food.
The stronger the Gu cultivator family, the more viges they controlled, and wars between Gu families often involved capturing mortal viges.
Great Stone Vige was arge vige with a poption of three thousand, having grown to its size due to a nearby market, the only one in the Far West.
Because it was closest to the Long family, it became one of their protected viges.
The Long family was one of the seven strongest Gu cultivator families in the Far West, and no one dared provoke them, so Great Stone Vige never experienced any raids.
Such a safe environment was exactly what Long Xuan was satisfied with.
Elder Long''s medicinal garden was vast, growing over a hundred types of spiritual herbs.
The spiritual herbs were graded from one to ten, with higher grades being legendary Earth-grade and Heaven-grade.
Despite its size, Elder Long''s garden only grew the lowest grade, first-grade spiritual herbs, and all of them were flowers, filling the garden with a rich floral fragrance.
Following the instructions in his memories, Long Xuan carried a bucket of green liquid into the garden. The green liquid was fertilizer.
Unlike stinky manure, this fertilizer had to be bought from a guild and was called ripening liquid by Long Xuan.
Using ripening liquid on spiritual herbs could halve their growth period.
Long Xuan was very interested in this ripening liquid, sniffing it closely as if trying to figure out itsponents.
If ordinary ripening liquid could have such an effect, then advanced ripening liquid could possibly reduce the millennia-long growth period of spiritual herbs to mere centuries.
He firmly believed that once he knew the form of this ripening liquid, he could apply his golden finger to develop an advanced ripening liquid.
"Too bad I don''t have a microscope," Long Xuan sighed, shaking his head.
Unable to make a microscope, he could only use his golden finger to achieve a simr capability. In this world where everyone used Gu, he felt it necessary to develop a Gu insect with this ability.
After some more study, finding that the progress rate might represent the shelf life of the ripening liquid but nothing more, he gave up and nned to revisit the research once he had created a microscope-Gu.
Long Xuanposed himself, scooping adle of ripening liquid onto a spiritual medicine called Moonlight Flower, increasing its growth from 17.1% to 17.2%.
After a nce, he continued pouring a seconddle, seeing the progress rise from 17.2% to 17.3%.
When he poured a thirddle, the progress remained unchanged.
Long Xuan pondered and thought of the second function of the golden finger. To verify his suspicion, he continued to pour three consecutive scoops of the ripening liquid on another type of spiritual herb, and this time, there were three changes in progress.
He tried pouring the fourth scoop, and only then did the progress stop increasing.
"indeed, is that so?"
Long Xuan showed an excited expression.
ording to Elder Long''s instructions, he needed to water each spiritual herb with three scoops once every seven days.
But now it seemed that the amount used was not precise, and perhaps the watering intervals were also not urate.
The types of spiritual herbs were different, so the amount of ripening liquid naturally varied.
Some spiritual herbs absorbed well and might need three scoops, while others might need just one scoop, and more than that could be counterproductive.
There would also be significant differences in watering times; some needed watering every seven days, while others might need it every five days.
The merchants could only estimate an approximate amount, and wastage was inevitable. To make more money, they might even exaggerate the required amount.
However, Long Xuan could tailor the approach perfectly, using the precise amount for each type of spiritual herb and ensuring seamless timing in fertilizing.
What does this mean? It means that without affecting the yield, he could embezzle a portion of the ripening liquid.
It also means that under his extreme cultivation, the spiritual herbs would mature much faster than expected, naturally surpassing the previous yields within a certain period.
ording to the original owner''s memory, Elder Long used the spiritual herbs in the medicine garden to pay sries. As long as the stipted amount was delivered on time, the extra yield would be his sry.
The harder the original owner worked, the more he earned. If he waszy and the yield couldn''t meet the required amount, he would have to pay out of his own pocket.
And Elder Long only cared about the results, not the process. He didn''t care how the original owner managed the medicine garden, and he had never inspected it, being in seclusion for many years.
So, isn''t this the first bucket of gold?
A smile appeared on Long Xuan''s face. The golden finger was indeed useful; not only was it not useless, but it was also somewhat extraordinary.
The golden finger Is not a system but an bug.