
of reading
1532
Read books
A trope that forces the hero to do something? A complete mess. A violent function that breaks the character. The writing style? Like someone shit their teeth in metaphors. A diarrhea of words, without much meaning. That alone makes it clear it's China. And the phrase "a dragon among men" confirms it even more. Since it's a translation, that's okay. But if it's the author's, then the author must be smoking something.
Thank you for your reply...
Excuse me? It might be silly to ask such a question in a novel with vulgarity, but what kind of relationship format is this? Given the love triangle tag and the sexually uninhibited world, is this polyamory? Honestly, you can beat me with a stone, but I don't like the latter and would like to know the content so I don't waste my time reading and then write petty, whiny comments. Thank you.
God, that really gave me the creeps. The author's fourth-person perspective?
She's not going to suddenly start accumulating qi in her dantian, is she? 30 years to the north, 30 years to the west...
I was just passing by, but your eloquence is simply phenomenal. It's so cultured that it would probably frighten the average person. *Applause*
I thought for a long time, trying to remember where I'd seen something like this, and after looking at the names, I finally understood. Isn't this the novel "It's Hard to Be a Mob in an Otome Game"? Because there's a truly amazing moment there that I'll never forget. When they were taking the test on the ship to determine their feelings, and the girls both wanted to compare their feelings with the hero at the same time, they both won. But before our guy could even step onto the platform, it lit up completely, and the two immediately looked at each other with ambiguous glances, saying each other's names. And our guy shamefully disappeared into dismorality somewhere after that. Then, after the fight, where they both cuties steered the ship of love, of course, they calmed the naive guy down, but that doesn't change the facts. They were a bit strange before. The hero helped them, saved their lives, and pulled them out of their misery. As a result, through some kind of similar experience of hardship, emotions and intimacy emerged between the girls, although, again, it was the hero who saved them from trouble. They later married, and while the hero was kicked out to another country, these two friends remained together in his house. Quite the contrary, yes.
Well, you know, call me paranoid, but the very possibility of this is already putting me off reading, lest I be even more disappointed later. But thank you very much for the time off. Good luck to you.
There's still someone in the heroine's body? What the... There's the migrant with that pumped-up mommy, and the original owner with the knight who served her? Like, how could the previous owner control the body or what? That one body is used by two different souls for different relationships? I don't need that.
Since you've read it, please tell me. Is this a pure one-on-one? I don't know, maybe I'm confused, but I remember a similar novel where the protagonist ends up in a catgirl's body, but the twist is that the previous owner didn't leave, so the love interest essentially has a pseudo-harem of the hero and the body's original owner, since they both love her...? Yeah, that's a bit weird. So I want to know if this is it, or if I'm confused.