Tao Wong described an ordinary character when the author started the series and then the drama was added into the simple life of Long Wu Ying. Wu Ying’s family was of the ordinary kind and they were farmers by profession. Then all of a sudden the boy was given a chance to rise for greatness and he just didn’t miss the opportunity that was thrown at him. He joined the group of soldiers that hired him from his village and thus became the immortal cultivator.
Later the missions were not related to the previous life of Wu Ying rather they were of the international type. The boy moved forward not only in life but also in reputation which he used to dream of as a child. A Thousand Li: Imperial March and A Thousand Li: The First War are also evidence of Ying’s greatness over the years as a handsome warrior.
It was Travis Baldree who started the narration in the first part and he continues here and in the next parts too. The fight fights and the incidents don’t look very well connected in the initial scenes and it looks as if the author is presenting everything in a random order but it is not true. Later everything starts making sense for the audience and the events join to form a perfect story for all of us.
Love and some romantic thoughts get mixed in the story for a few moments and then the main story takes over again. Drifting from the main plot has never been the aim of the author as he tries to keep things going in a calculated manner.