
My Entertainment Company Simulator
About This Novel
Feng Hua played countless management and business games in his previous life. From managing a small farm to an entire planet, from primitive tribes to cyberpunk, he dominates them all. But he never thought that he would actually inherit an entertainment company. In the game. Short of people? Recruit with one click and choose from the panel. Short of money? One-click loan, bank approval in seconds. The protagonist is even more like a superman. He can spin for twenty hours straight and no matter where he falls, he can get up from his bed and resurrect with full health the next day. What about reality? Every employee has his own little thoughts. The bank looked at him like a liar. He himself would feel listless all day long if he missed even one minute of sleep. When it was most difficult, he thought about giving up. But this isn't a fucking game, and it's not something that ends with a click of "exit." This is the uncle's lifelong effort, his dream since childhood, and the trust of more than a dozen people in the company who are willing to accompany him. He looked at the mountain of mess in front of him and took a deep breath. "In that case..." "Simulator, start!"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 17d ago
Personal opinion
The author has ideas and a good angle, and the company's management is written with detail and realism; however, I skipped reading the simulation content in the later stages. There are too few real-life celebrities and blurry virtual characters. The geographical location and industry niche of small-scale companies are not obvious in the book, and there is no large-scale company introduction and industry framework.
Yes, it looks good. I can see the emotions, which are more or less relatable. However, maybe the author wanted to write a little too much, so the plate was too big and the plot was slow to unfold.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 17d ago
Personal opinion
The author has ideas and a good angle, and the company's management is written with detail and realism; however, I skipped reading the simulation content in the later stages. There are too few real-life celebrities and blurry virtual characters. The geographical location and industry niche of small-scale companies are not obvious in the book, and there is no large-scale company introduction and industry framework.
Yes, it looks good. I can see the emotions, which are more or less relatable. However, maybe the author wanted to write a little too much, so the plate was too big and the plot was slow to unfold.









