This book is also titled "Being a Superman Isn't So Easy." How laughable... Do you think that by becoming an Ultraman, you can truly protect this world? Through the experience of death, he reveals to
The universe is vast and boundless. When gazed upon from Earth, it is a canvas adorned with countless stars. Yet the true nature of the cosmos is darkness and mystery; aside from the nebulae scattered throughout, all that fills its expanse is shadow and void. Light travels at 299,792,458 meters per second in a vacuum—an incredible speed, and yet, to traverse the universe would still require an eternity.
Deep within the M78 Nebula, three million light-years from Earth, nearly sixty million planets circle its core. Yet among these myriad worlds, only one holds the true center. There lies the home of the Ultramen—the Star of Ultra, also known as the Land of Light.
The Land of Light boasts mountains and plains, but no seas; those wishing to swim must venture to Anima or Kifaron. Upon the heights, the fabled Aurora, known as the Spring of Life, shimmers with healing power. Across the plains stand some three hundred towns, untouched by the change of seasons—a fact that fills its inhabitants with envy for Earth’s fourfold cycle. Since the Great Ultra Evolution 260,000 years ago, the average resident of the Land of Light stands forty meters tall and weighs forty thousand tons.
It was after this event that the inhabitants of the Land of Light began to journey among the stars. They brought peace to the native peoples of distant worlds, defending them from harm and spreading the renown of their homeland. Thus, they became known across the galaxies by many titles: Guardian, Ultraman, Superman… Yet they themselves preferred one name above all.
They called them