
Anti-japanese War: There Are No Cowards under the M35 Helmet
About This Novel
Game anchor Li Huaxia accidentally traveled to the Songhu battlefield in 1937. Became a temporary squad leader of the 88th Division in the frontline position. Faced with the tragedy of the real battlefield, he was lucky enough to open the "Blood Battlefield Card Panel" - every time he completes a bloody battle mission, he can obtain cards: from [Precision Shooting] to [Tactical Command], from [German Arms Ammunition Box] to [American Mortar], and can even bestow various talents on teammates around him. From the bloody battle to the embarrassing evacuation of Sihang Warehouse, Li Huaxia could not change any status quo or historical trend. The only thing he could do was to lead his men in a bloody battle to resist the outside world. "There are no cowards under the M35 helmet?" "No, I want all the national heroes under this helmet!"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 4d ago
The protagonist's cheat is to summon planes, tanks and soldiers for a few minutes to rescue the protagonist, which is very interesting. . .
If you like to write dramas, don't make depressing plots
The conflict between the two atmospheres will make people think that you, the author, are an NT. You are limiting the protagonist's thinking while being unparalleled and cheating while pretending to write a pseudo-documentary. In fact, you are writing a novel by Long Aotian, a young man suffering from literary youth disease.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 4d ago
The protagonist's cheat is to summon planes, tanks and soldiers for a few minutes to rescue the protagonist, which is very interesting. . .
If you like to write dramas, don't make depressing plots
The conflict between the two atmospheres will make people think that you, the author, are an NT. You are limiting the protagonist's thinking while being unparalleled and cheating while pretending to write a pseudo-documentary. In fact, you are writing a novel by Long Aotian, a young man suffering from literary youth disease.









