Long Live The Emperor!: About an inexplicable point (Tucao)


When you read a book, if you always take "the protagonist won't die, so you can just wander around, everyone else is a fool, and 10,000 years of hard work is not as good as the protagonist's hard work for more than ten years" as a premise, then What's the point?

Because the protagonist doesn't die, it doesn't really make any difference whether the protagonist is a shrew, a rascal, a wise man, a warrior, or a saint, because they don't die, they're all the same.

"What, your protagonist is a saint, but you can't blow up a planet with one punch? Look at my protagonist, Tian Tianlang, who is surrounded by beautiful women, and can destroy a universe with one click. Your protagonist can't."

"You actually brought out the blue-eyed white dragon. Wait for me, let me add 10 more zeros to the attack power of my card."

"Ah! Then I'll add 11 zeros."

"I added 12."

"13."

"14."

Is that kind of fun?

So, are you reading a story or writing a book with a high opinion?

I guess that Mr. Gu Long has also been scolded by readers like this, so he wrote Chu Liuxiang to death in "Midnight Orchid", I guess he also suffered the same speechlessness at that time.

But the author believes that taking reasonable actions to avoid risks, to cross the pass line as much as possible, or to achieve 80, 90, is better than "Anyway, the protagonist will not die, anyway, you can't achieve 100 points , just like me "It's much better to talk about it, right?


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