This novel has its uniqueness. Somehow the author realized the world existed many countries, not just China and its enemies. So we get to see many nationalities showcased in the story, which is a fresh break from typical Chinese webnovel. The author also hints that his worldbulding will encompass myhtology at the global scale. Which makes 48 hours an intriguing story at first glance. But the story also has flaws similar to other Chinese webnovels. It suffers from using series of coincidences to push the plot, woodblocked character designs, and predictable story flow. Coupled with appaling translation (One of the worst I've seen from years of reading in Qidian. Seriously, a machine translation might be better), so to sum it, this is a very frustarting novel to read. Yet all of these flaws can be overlook if the writing is done well. Alas I have to say it isn't. It's an unpolished novel, filled with impropable details that disrupted the reading experience. But the real issue that makes me drop the novel is that apart from the desert island, the subsequent arcs and intermissions are too boring. I tried hard to read Tokyo Drift (At the end I just skim the arc) to reach the third arc, but I couldn't stand the dull writing anymore. TLDR, It has nice concept, but the writing and translation are subpar.
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LIKEthe 4th arc is copy paste of black sail so watch that instead.
RainbowBeheader:Well good points just that author is fked by this site cuz the best is fourth arc in my opinion 3rd about snipers isnt bad too, but damn that pirate life is great, read it in mtl version and still loved that brutal sea life