why you should read this ...1) The mc is smart and Op ..2) Mc maintain good relationship with powerful NPC (non-player character)3) great character development 4)........
I dont even want to write a real review because I know it'll just be deleted πΆπππππππππΆππΆππΆπΆππππππππ€ππ€π€ππ€ππ€πππππππππππππ€ππππ€π€π
A breath of fresh air that is both funny and good. Also no extreme nationalistic views in a chinese novel set in Japan! I really hope the translation continues...
If you look handsome, you will always be lucky.If you look handsome, you will always be lucky.If you look handsome, you will always be lucky. If you look handsome, you will always be lucky. If you look handsome, you will always be lucky. If you look handsome, you will always be lucky. If you look handsome, you will always be lucky.
Finally they have arrived at the park named Apex Park and have the skull of a Triceratops as logo. The gates of the park is massive 10 meters tall and 13 meters wide the gate has opened by itself and make a *thwang-thud noises and steam appears at the sides of the gate. Larry park the limousine inside a building because this park is a open feild and is a thousand hectares wide, he got out first of the car then opens the doors for the other two go out. Larry gets some equipment from the side and handed the both of them a gun loaded with tranquillisers.
Translation Quality: Very goodUpdates: 16/wk - pretty goodStory Dev.: - Very well-paced.Char design: Very good given the survival apocalypse genreWorld bg: Well thought. You get a good feel of the places people and thingsIt's truly hard to find a gem like this. Good grammar and a plot that not only has thought behind it, but flows well. Unique premise. Good MC. Female MC (rare). Non-human MC (rare). The pace of her growing into and discovering the extent of her powers is realistic as well.Overall, I'm glad I decided to randomly look for new novels to read. Thank you author.
This masquerading that book publishers partake of is aggravating for a few reasons. It assumes that size matters and readers won't buy books that are not novels. This assumption leads to all sorts of smoke-and-mirrors tactics with font, point size, leading, and white space -- as publishers strive for that seemingly all-important 200-page length. They will also include unwanted introductory material and criticism; or they will publish several shorter pieces together. Meanwhile, publishers will compress long novels (especially classic novels) into as little paper as possible. Therefore, at a glance it will appear that Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and its 1966 prequel Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys are more or less the same length. I understand that publishers are not capricious in their marketing strategies and that these practices are based on researching market trends, but it is still an aggravation for book lovers and would-be book buyers.
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