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I Reincarnated as a Tortoise

Kahna
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Synopsis
The accident should have killed me. Instead, I woke up half-buried in mud beneath a gray sky — inside the body of a tortoise. Not a mythical beast. Not a hidden prodigy. Just a small, slow creature in a world where strength decides who lives and who dies. I have no legendary weapon, no overpowered system, and no destiny guiding me forward. I have a cracked shell, fragile limbs, and a human mind that remembers what it means to struggle. In a land where even kings and ancient beasts fall chasing power, survival is not guaranteed. And if I cannot be the strongest — then I will endure. One step at a time.
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Chapter 1 - The prologue

​I woke up, and the first thing I felt was that I couldn't move.

​It wasn't like being paralyzed; it was like being made of stone. Everything was dark, and I could feel a freezing liquid pressing against me from all sides. I tried to reach out my hand, but I couldn't find my fingers. All I felt were short, heavy stumps that hit the ground with a dull thud.

​I was underwater.

​I tried to gasp for air, but my chest wouldn't expand. It felt like I was trapped inside a thick, bony cage that I couldn't escape. My heart was beating so slowly it felt like a hammer hitting a wall.

​What is happening to me? Why am I so heavy?

​The water was dark and silent, but then something changed.

​Above the surface, Two spots of blue fire lit up. They weren't lights; they were eyes. As my vision adjusted, I saw a massive, white skull looking down into the water. It was so big it made me feel like a speck of dust.

​"Is this the one?" a voice rumbled. The sound was so deep it made the water shake.

"The successor is just a pebble. You can't

even crawl out of a pool, can you?"

​I wanted to scream. I wanted to tell whatever was watching me that I didn't belong here. I wasn't a "pebble." I was a person. But no words came out, only a quiet, dry hiss that vanished into the water.

​I looked around the dark bottom of the pool. I could see the shapes of broken swords and old, rusted armor half-buried in the mud. This was a grave. And I realized that if I didn't move right now, I would just be another piece of trash at the bottom of it.

​I didn't have any strength left. I didn't know where I was. But I wasn't ready to die again.

​I dug one claw into the mud. It took everything I had just to move my leg.

​One inch. I was slow. I was heavy. But I wasn't going to stay down there.