Reincarnated as a Fisherman and Father of the Sea
Kenji died as nothing more than an exhausted office worker, buried beneath deadlines and loneliness. When he opened his eyes again, he found himself on the shore of a quiet coastal village named Minato—with no strength, no powers, and no money to his name. All he had was a rickety fishing rod, an empty stomach, and a small boy named Sora, who clung to him and called him Papa.
Life in Minato isn’t kind. The villagers laugh at Kenji’s failures, calling him “Empty Bucket” as his nets come up dry. Feeding a child with nothing but copper coins feels impossible. But Kenji refuses to give up. If he can’t fight with swords or magic, then he’ll fight with his patience, his hands, and his will to survive.
The first fish he sells earns him just four copper—barely enough for bread. Yet that bread tastes like victory. Step by step, coin by coin, Kenji begins to climb. From sardines to larger catches, from ridicule to respect, his journey becomes one of grit and quiet determination.
But there’s something unusual about Sora. Whenever the boy is near, the sea seems to favor them. Fish gather closer, storms ease, and nets feel heavier. Villagers whisper that he may be blessed by the sea itself.
With his growing skill and Sora’s mysterious gift, Kenji sets out not just to survive, but to build a new life as a father, a fisherman, and perhaps… something far greater.
This is a story of tides and family, of laughter and hunger, of copper to silver to gold. A slice-of-life journey about a man who was nobody—becoming a father, a provider, and, against all odds, a legend of the sea.