100,000 men of sacrifice swept across the world at the beginning
If you had 100,000 men of sacrifice, what would you do with them?
" Of course. Go and bargain with Xixi. I'll get whatever I want!"
" The person above has no foresight. 100,000 people are delivering packages, with a monthly salary of 8,000 and an annual income of 10 billion!"
"Tsk tsk, just this? If there are really 100,000 people, I'll get them to deliver the express delivery first, then I'll help Xixi bargain for the price at night. At the same time, I'll also get them to sign up for my novel and dominate the rankings for 10,000 years!"
Ding!" The Death Warrior System has been bound. It has been detected that the host's current world is too small. The world transfer has begun!" Qin Ying bound herself to the Deathsworn System and traveled through the heavenly realms.
In the Great Qin world, he became the son of Qin III, killed Zhao Gao, destroyed Liu Bang and Xiang Yu, and wiped out the Huns of the Hundred Yue, protecting the Great Qin for eternity. In the World of Gods, he became King Zhou of Shang, killed Daji, destroyed Western Zhou, and captured Jiang Ziya alive.
In the Super God World, he had become the dickhead Ge Xiaolun, punching the Angel King Huaye and kicking the Death God Carl.……
[Main worlds: Great Qin, God Deification, Super God, Journey to the West, others to be determined…]
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novel1 NOUN 1A fictitious prose narrative of book length, typically representing character and action with some degree of realism. ‘the novels of Jane Austen’ ‘a paperback novel’ More example sentencesSynonyms 1.1the novelThe literary genre represented or exemplified by novels. ‘the novel is the most adaptable of all literary forms’ Origin Mid 16th century from Italian novella (storia) ‘new (story)’, feminine of novello ‘new’, from Latin novellus, from novus ‘new’. The word is also found from late Middle English until the 18th century in the sense ‘a novelty, a piece of news’, from Old French novelle (see novel). Pronunciation novel/ˈnɒv(ə)l/ novel2 ADJECTIVE Interestingly new or unusual. ‘he hit on a novel idea to solve his financial problems’ Origin Late Middle English (in the sense ‘recent’): from Old French, from Latin novellus, from novus ‘new’. Pronunciation novel/ˈnɒv(ə)l/