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Notes -
Obnoxious issues that arise when you read Chinese Cultivation Novels:
At some point, when the chapter count is well past 4 digits and/or when there's a hiatus, human translators (usually unpaid fans) can drop out, and you run into MTL (machine translation).
This might not sound like a problem today, after all, LLMs are pretty good at the job. To test that myself, I've converted chapters from (translated) English to Chinese and back, and find near perfect fidelity.
No, dear reader, the issue is that the MTL can be old. And it's non-trivial to find the original Chinese sources.*
Cue me weeping in agony as the best translation of a favorite novel changes character gender and names every few paragraphs, and translates what was previously "Land of Sin" as "Naughty Land".
Some frankly insane bastards persevere nonetheless, becoming one with the Dao of MTL, and self-reportedly no longer see the broken Mandarin Matrix but grokk the underlying intent. Unfortunately, often at the cost of being unable to process normal English.
Fuck it, I'm going to do dig down the Chinese version and throw it into Google Gemini, a million token-wide context window can't hurt.
*Most places where you can read Xianxia in English use unauthorized or outright pirated translations. And these sites all steal from one another, so if a bad translation becomes the default, good luck finding a better one.
Lo and behold, after figuring out a way to find OG Chinese pirate sites, and then finding one that doesn't use JS nonsense to prevent copy and pasting, I can read the rest of the novel in peace. A tad-bit awkward, but absolutely better than what was the state of the art in 2017, with seemingly no attention from a human editor.
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