The Endless Myth vs. Battle Through the Heavens: A Comparative Study of Myth-Bound Worlds and Endless Ascension
The novel The Endless Myth and the hugely popular Chinese fantasy series Battle Through the Heavens (斗破苍穹) are both expansive, long-running works. However, the reasons their stories continue and the way their protagonists are positioned within their worlds differ radically.
This article compares The Endless Myth and Battle Through the Heavens, focusing on their worldbuilding, protagonists, and the treatment of growth and myth to examine the underlying narrative structures of each work.
Worldbuilding: A World Fixed by Myth vs. A World Expanded by Hierarchy
The world of The Endless Myth is a closed system where myth and faith function as the very foundation of order. Myth is not merely a collection of stories but an institutional framework that defines meaning itself. People are forced to live within the boundaries of myth, and escaping it is nearly impossible.
In contrast, the world of Battle Through the Heavens is an open system that expands endlessly through cultivation levels, ranks, and power hierarchies. As the protagonist grows stronger, new regions, factions, and even higher realms are revealed. The world evolves in step with personal advancement.
Why the Stories Never End
The Endless Myth cannot truly end because losing myth would mean the collapse of meaning itself. Myth is constantly revised and retold, but never rejected. An ending would not bring salvation; it would create a void.
Battle Through the Heavens became a long-running series because its growth system has no predefined ceiling. Defeating a powerful enemy only reveals a stronger one. The narrative continues not through mythic necessity, but through the promise of ever-greater strength.
Protagonists in Contrast: The Chosen Symbol vs. The Self-Made Ascender
The protagonist of The Endless Myth, Messiah, is a chosen figure consumed as a symbol. His value is defined not by personal effort, but by the role imposed on him by myth. Being chosen strips him of freedom.
By contrast, Xiao Yan, the protagonist of Battle Through the Heavens, is a self-made hero who rises through effort, failure, and perseverance. After losing his powers and falling to the lowest rank, he regains strength through training and combat.
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Messiah: a figure burdened with meaning
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Xiao Yan: a figure who acquires meaning through action
This distinction clearly separates the ethical foundations of the two narratives.
Myth vs. Growth
In The Endless Myth, growth is not necessarily positive. Gaining power or understanding often means becoming more deeply entangled in myth. Growth represents not liberation, but deeper confinement.
In Battle Through the Heavens, growth is an absolute good. Training leads to power, power leads to broader horizons, and the world opens accordingly. Gods and destiny may exist, but they are obstacles to overcome, not systems to submit to.
Ideological Differences
The Endless Myth poses introspective and philosophical questions such as:
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Why do humans need myths?
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Is being chosen a blessing or a curse?
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Is a life bound by meaning truly just?
Battle Through the Heavens emphasizes action-oriented values:
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Effort is rewarded
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Strength proves identity
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Individuals can carve open the world through will and action
Conclusion: Two Paths to an Endless Story
Although both The Endless Myth and Battle Through the Heavens are long-running narratives, they represent opposite structural principles:
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A myth that cannot end because meaning must not be lost
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An ascension story that never ends because growth never stops
One confines humanity within myth. The other pushes humanity beyond the limits of the world.
This contrast highlights the diversity of reasons why modern fantasy stories continue and what “endlessness” truly means in narrative form.






