antee victory against an Emperor Realm expert with a perfect Dao. This is the miraculous effect of the Golden Peach. The first seven herbs on the herbarium greatly aid cultivation. The last four, while they have medicinal properties, function better as divine artifacts. "Heaven and earth embrace all things; for winter, take its essence." Time and space form the mystical core of the universe. Without time, no story would unfold; without space, time would pass meaninglessly. The Winter’s Thought is such divine wood capable of locking a segment of heaven and earth! Wooden containers made from it could be integrated into one's body, creating a new world within the cultivator. The wonders of such wood need no explanation—a new world within one's body opens vast potentials. The Medicine God never saw this wood personally, but ancient records confirmed its existence. They detailed a cultivator who, after integrating Winter’s Thought, exhibited various mystical abilities. The Medicine God theorized that this wood likely came from towering ancient trees. However, the whereabouts of this mythical tree remain a mystery. Given that all things on the Jiuyang Continent possess spirit, even lifeless stones and withered grasses can gain sentience through divine intervention. The herbs on the herbarium are all sentient; even if discovered by mortals, these herbs choose their recipients. Thus, those who consume divine herbs are truly favored by the heavens, guided by such divine entities toward becoming land immortals—a testament to unmatched fortune! After wood that locks space, naturally comes wood that locks time. According to legend, a type of agarwood could lock a moment in time. Containers made from this wood could preserve items for millennia without decay. In other words, a person placed inside such a container would remain youthful for ten thousand years! With eternity on their minds, cultivators continuously battle against death, striving for eternal life. The ability to gain ten thousand years could provide the breakthrough needed for immortality. The true nature of the celestial realm remains unknown, as none who ascended ever returned. Though uncertain if the celestial realm offers eternal life, remaining on this wondrous earthly realm with such longevity could seem more desirable. Again, the Medicine God never saw this miraculous wood, but he suspected it to come from an agarwood divine tree. Why he believed it to be a single tree, rather than a forest, he didn’t explain. Perhaps, to him, multiple such treasures seemed implausible. Then we have a godstone that stores vital energy, the Yang Stone. This stone serves no other purpose but to absorb and store the world's energy. In prolonged battles, ample vital energy is essential. With the Yang Sto