The Psionic Era: The Loved and the Hated

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

On an ordinary spring day, an internet troll made the selfless decision to give his life to save a child. As a reward for his final act of goodness, he was reincarnated on an alternate earth, where humans and animals could awaken psychic powers.But it was not your standard reincarnation. On this alternate earth that was inhabited by psychic animals and humans, the man was born as twins, a boy named Christopher and a girl named Kristine, both with the same memories of their past lives.Thankfully, for their lifetime of sin and their final good deed in their past life, the twins were blessed with the "Angel and Devil System."Follow the twin's journey as they navigate the challenges and dangers of their new world with their cheat.

Chapters(45 total)

Reviews

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Community Reviews(3)

  • AppleGrowthRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    Im really liking this novel. The concept itself is pretty unique. I only remember one Chinese comic that had a similar concept going on. But the author has his own take on it and so far it's going pretty well.
    The beginning chapters tend to get you pissed of at the Male MC. Especially his apparent disregard for his sister. I still am not completely sure whether he cares about her or only thinks of her as a pitiful part of himself that he has to take care of as a burden. There's no hate but I really don't see the love that often.
    the potential is a lot tho. Like I'm really looking forward to next chapters. Hopefully, the author handles the father interrogation scene well. I personally don't want the system to be revealed at all.
  • 🤬Kev😈Royal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    Story seems original enough. Two twins identical memories from previous life and a unique golden finger. I'm enjoying how it seems being a girl affects Kris's emotions and choices whereas Chris seems to have his own difficulties controlling his ruthless and logical choices.
    Previous reviewer mentioned he didn't "see" the love between the siblings that often, but I think it's a mute point. It's true that there aren't pivotal heart warming scene's to draw on, but it makes it seem more natural. The nature of their relationships is closer than any relationship you can imagine. Plus it is mentioned that his choices are affected by his sister, which indicates affection, love, and all the above as is hers in her own way. Not sure what more people would want without making the story corny/cringe.
    Overall I'm enjoying the plot, the characters, the world building, and the whole concept of the story. Personally, I've favorited the story. It's worth the read.
  • Scrapheap class NHPRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 4.5
    It's a good premise. I love isekai and I've read.. probably too much of it, can't say I recall being reincarnated into twins before though, so it's fresh.
    My concerns coming into this was that it was going to be some kind of hive mind situation or only focused on one of the two, but the author does and did a good job avoiding both of those. Each of the twins feels like their own person while still retaining that 'yeah we were a fuckin loser' thing. They don't just one chapter forget that fact and never bring it up again, making the whole 'isekai' pointless like I've seen some stories and even anime do.
    The worldbuilding so far hasn't been huge, but what we've seen has been interesting, and I'm definiitely looking forward to a future where our heroes can explore the world outside the walls of rich kid land.
    Unfortunately, I'm not sure that will happen. Despite the good and things I like, I'd be lying to you if I said there were no faults. Several plot points (especially in the most recent chapters as of writing this) feel quite well-trodden. The characters, while retaining some solid character flaws, can also come off as quite mary-sue. Less in that everyone likes them, more in that everyone they want to like them does. As of yet there haven't quite been any life altering hurdles to shove our protagonists into good character growth, but we're still rather early in.
    My only other complaint would be that the story has a bit too much tell and a little too little show. Not that it can really be helped with the current environment, and at one point the author does take advantage of this to pull out a minor twist, but I feel as though the solution would be simple in adding less detail here or there.
    All in all, though, I'm following it. The prose is not fancy or something to write home about, but there aren't many spelling/grammar mistakes and not nearly enough to ruin a reading experience unless you've got a degree for it. I hope to see yall in the comment sections (espec