The Newbie God Is Summoning Heroes From Earth [World Creation/ Management]

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

“Ooo… destined hero from another world, please defeat the demon king and save my world from its demise.”

While walking on an empty street to his college, Cedric got struck by a meteor out of the blue and died. When he woke up, he found himself as the creator god of a new world.

Overseeing and orchestrating the rise and fall of civilization is fun. But when demon kings that threaten his world and his life appears, Cedric must act and kill those demon kings ASAP.

Under the rule where gods cannot directly intervene in low leveled world, coupled with his world’s inability to give birth to a hero on its own. Cedric is forced to choose an alternative- Summoning heroes from another world.

Entering his ex-home world, Earth. He must find a suitable hero to save his world.

This is the story of a world(s) and the god that manages it as he slowly transforms into a qualified god (with small ‘g’), while making sure the people in his world doesn't mess around too much and killed themselves into extinction.

update 1ch/week

Chapters(129 total)

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Community Reviews(3)

  • JaraSRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    Have you ever wanted to be a God, to create your own world and manipulate what is happening in it. Than this story is for you and me. The story is simple to understand and goals are clear. Make a prosperous (profitable) world.
    As someone with English as a second language I appreciate simple and clearly written story. The main character makes understandable mistakes and tries to learn from them. The snowball effect of small choices having world changing consequences is very well thought out. Side characters are decent, but the story focuses more on the big picture.
    My only gripe is the grammar sometimes the author uses wrong tens or makes simple mistakes, unless you a the grammar police you will have fun reading.
  • PlenitRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    I love the story, the combination of world building and comedy, the great importance of the technological leap for the civilaztion and the presence of pragmatic, good and bad character with the fact that anything don't go predictably with result both good and bad create an amazing and interesting world.🫠🫠🫠🫠🫠
  • MamiRoyal Road
    ★★★★ 4.0
    This novel takes a simple but fascinating premise: a man becomes a god by chance, gains a sassy System as his only real companion, and begins shaping a world to both grow it and pay off his debt. Despite rough edges, it remains highly engaging, especially for readers who enjoy heavy worldbuilding and large-scale storytelling.
    The story is the strongest point. The plot is ambitious yet cohesive, with timeskips used effectively to show sweeping changes without feeling jarring (I am especially impressed that I wasn’t bothered by them (many writers struggle to get this right). The System deserves a special mention: witty, sharp, and often the highlight of the dialogue. While most other characters are functional rather than memorable, the System alone is strong enough to earn the character score a solid 4/5.
    The negatives, however, are hard to ignore. Grammar is by far the biggest obstacle. The prose frequently stumbles over tense shifts, clunky phrasing, and repetitive wording. I’m used to bad grammar, so it didn’t bother me too much, but readers with lower tolerance may find it frustrating. It often breaks immersion and makes the text feel unpolished. With a careful edit, the writing could easily jump a full tier in quality.
    Another issue is the sheer overload of systems. Beyond GP, there’s world balance, NE (overexplained to explain its simple premise) which doesn't affect world balance even if it should, EXP, laws, faith energy, charity energy, world level, and more. Since the premise is worldbuilding, some complexity is expected, but this feels excessive. Small details that could have been hand-waved away like “people’s character affects their mana and it affects their environment” are instead introduced as separate mechanics and then dropped once they’ve advanced the plot. On top of that, the leveling framework (0–16, each split into 4 subcategories) makes progression confusing rather than intuitive. Sentences like “the adventuring party consisted of two level ones