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What It's Like Being a Vampire

"What's it like becoming a vampire?" When Xiang Kun first sees this question on Quora, he treats the answers as nothing more than fantasy stories. Back then, he naturally never expected that it didn't take long before he had the qualifications to truly answer this question. After he recently losing his job, Xiang Kun experiences a series of inexplicable physical and mental changes—unable to eat or drink anything other than plain water, craving for blood, shedding a layer of his skin like a snake, staying awake for days before falling fast asleep for 30 hours, feeling uncomfortable staying in the sun... He has definitely transformed into a different person, or, is he even still a human? Driven by his determination to seek the truth, Xiang Kun embarks on a dangerous yet exciting journey to understand his identity and powers. Nevertheless, to his surprise, he seems to be the first person ever who has undergone those transformations... Is it his destiny? Why is he the chosen one? At the start, Xiang Kun doesn’t have the answers. But he refuses to give up searching. During his self-exploration, Xiang Kun is taken by surprise by the positive effects of the changes to his body. Realizing that he can train certain parts of his body to carry out extraordinary functions, he continuously pushes his limits from building his muscle mass to enhancing his sense of smell and hearing. These “special powers” enable him to solve crimes and assist others in need. Until one day, he discovers something that gives him a lead to the cause of the changes in his body... Can Xiang Kun uncover the truth and figure out what exactly happened to him? Will he trust anyone with his secret, or face all the challenges alone? Many mysteries and uncertainties await him.

Miraculous Hamburger · perkotaan
Peringkat tidak cukup
475 Chs

Chapter 113: The Conquered Golden Sauce

Penerjemah: 549690339

Chapter 113: The Defeated Golden Sauce

Xiang Kun cautiously placed the woodcarving into a wooden box he made himself, securing it so that it wouldn't move inside. If its silly tuft of hair were to break, the entire woodcarving would be ruined.

By eight in the morning, he sat in front of his computer and opened QQ, sending a message to a friend, "It's done. Check it out when you have time." What he was referring to was not the woodcarving, but a software outsourcing project.

In the past two weeks, he was not only crafting a woodcarving gift for Tang Baona. On the 15th of last month, he had voluntarily taken on an outsourced task.

Xiang Kun wasn't fond of social activities in real life, but on the internet, in certain sections of several purely technical forums, he was a well-known and active veteran member.

Many programmers were like him - being solitary in reality, but preferring to stick together online.