I'm afraid I'm not familiar with the author of 'the swarm novel'. There are so many novels out there, and without more information, it's hard to say. You could check book databases or ask in a bookstore.
There were novels similar to "The Swarm":
1: Fairy, Your Character Set Has Been Changed by Me, Author: Old Man Dong
2:" You Can't Imagine the Joy of a Director ", Author: Moon's Stargate
The following is a detailed introduction of these novels:
1:" Fairy, I've changed your character setting ":" Fairy, I've changed your character setting."
"It's true.“
2." You Can't Imagine the Happiness of a Director ": According to media reports, he was China's Steven Spielberg, who had won dozens of international Best Director titles.
In the eyes of the female celebrities, he was the king, a god who could turn stone into gold. His words contained the laws of heaven, and he could decide life and death with a single thought. He was the godfather of the entertainment industry who could make anyone famous.
Y, Bilibili, W-Bo, D-Flap. The movie entries with his topic exceeded 100,000, and the views exceeded a trillion. He was known as the uncrowned king of the film capital circle.
It was him, Li Muge, a future movie maker who once declared," I will come, I will see, I will conquer."
You can read these novels on Qidian Chinese Network.
In 'the swarm short story', the characters could include those within the swarm itself. For instance, if it's a swarm of ants, there could be worker ants, soldier ants, and the queen ant. Additionally, there could be external characters like a scientist who is trying to understand the behavior of the ants in the swarm. There could also be other animals in the vicinity that interact with the swarm in some way, either by competing for resources or by being symbiotic with it.
I don't know who created the'swarm original story' as there's not enough information given. It could be an unknown indie author or a group of storytellers.
The word 'swarm' meant that they were coming like a swarm of bees. It described a lot of people gathering in a place in a mess. This idiom came from the twenty-sixth chapter of Li Ruzhen's Love in the Mirror and Flowers in the Qing Dynasty. It described the scene of many people wearing Haoran headscarves and holding mobile phones. It can be used as a predicative or an attributive, referring to the disorderly gathering of people. Synonymbs swarmed over, while antonyms swarmed in, followed, and so on. This idiom was commonly used and neutral, and was produced in modern times. The English translation was "surge in."
I'm not sure specifically as I haven't seen it. But they could be the people directly affected by the swarm, like farmers if it was a swarm of locusts, or scientists studying the swarm.
The characters included the protagonist, Violet Moses Zeg, who sought the true meaning of life through her experiences.
The Queen of the Swarm in Cyberpunk. Author: The End of Cold Night. It is a game/game novel with transmigration. The game is calm, the thoughts are clear, the cyberpunk is cheating, and the funny elements.
User recommendation: Ring the bell once, apply holy oil, and pray in a low voice.
Ring the bell twice, dredge the nerves, connect the prosthetic body, move the joints, and inject spirit…
Ring the bell three times…
"Praise Om Messiah."
Violet Moses Zeg was getting used to her new Prosthetic Body. It was a pure and flawless metal left arm, and the surging power of the new Life Soul was about to burst out.
He smiled and said,"
"It's reasonable for people to know some insignificant knowledge after living a little longer, right?"
(Female protagonist, no CP, careful entry)
(No way, the author really doesn't know how to write about love.)
I hope you will like this book.
Swarm fiction is a form of collaborative storytelling. It involves multiple authors or contributors coming together to create a single work of fiction. Each person adds their own ideas, plot twists, or characters, and over time, the story evolves in a unique way. It's like a digital-age take on the old - fashioned story - telling circles, but with the potential for a much larger and more diverse group of contributors.