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Tomato Novel

Tomato Novel is very popular, but I still prefer reading classic fantasy.

I saw that Fanqie Novel was embroiled in another controversy about AI-written content in the past couple of days. My initial reaction wasn’t surprise, but rather a sense that this issue will eventually come to the surface. Considering the combination of free platforms, the pressure for daily updates, and algorithmic distribution, it is almost inevitable that authors will turn to AI to supplement their content capacity.

But honestly, I have a consistent feeling about many books on Fanqie: they are readable, and even the first hundred chapters are often quite good. However, the further along you get, they tend to be nothing more than tropes and speed, lacking that inherent power that classic Xuanhuan or cultivation novels possess. This ‘power’ is hard to explain—it’s probably that feeling when you know it’s a bit over-the-top/cringey (“zhong er”), but you still want to follow the characters all the way through.

It’s something worth noting, and this isn’t meant to criticize the platform. Fanqie being completely free definitely attracts a lot of readers; there’s no arguing that point. However, for someone like me whose taste was spoiled early on by Tian Can Tu Dou, Wo Chi Xi Hong Shi, Er Gen, and Chen Dong, AI can match the output volume, but it cannot replicate the flavor/quality.