
Wizard: Live Hard and You Will Become Stronger
About This Novel
Luo Xi traveled through the wizarding world and became an apprentice who had just been lucky enough to identify the potential of a wizard. He traveled across the ocean to the wizarding world. Even more fortunately, he also carries a golden finger with him on his journey through time. As long as he works hard, he can become stronger. [Try to take a deep breath, and the time will be +1 day. ] [Work hard to complete a reading, time point + 2 days. ] [Work hard to complete a wobaba, the time point is +3 days. ] The accumulated time points can be used for many things. [You start to read the "Geographical Guide to the Wizarding World" hard, concentrating on it and forgetting to eat and sleep] [Seven days have passed, and you have some understanding of the geography of the wizarding world. ] [Introduction to the geography of the Wizarding World. ] So. Start living hard today and become stronger every day in the future. -------------- Wizard article, white wizard camp, three views are correct. The protagonist has a good personality and is popular. Genius flow. Newbie, new book, please collect and recommend.
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Official(34)Scraped 2mo ago
The framework and plot don't match. At the beginning, the protagonist is placed in the most powerful white wizard organization, and the people around him basically have good intentions towards the protagonist. Then the protagonist is indeed written as a very stubborn person, keeping a low profile in everything and not daring to compete for the first place. Is this plot development appropriate? If the protagonist saves the time points for cheating and doesn't use them until he doesn't need them in the future, that would make sense. Or it makes sense to use the plug-in time points for knowledge accumulation and lay a strong foundation. But the final result is that three years have passed, and there are still about 200 cheat points left, and the strength and knowledge level are only comparable to fourth-level talents. Is this appropriate? The protagonist will definitely get more than 10 cheat points every day just by practicing and meditating. Adding other learning, breathing, emotional changes, etc., He will get at least 20 cheat points every day. What is the concept? It takes three years for the protagonist to study for a third-class talent, which is equivalent to 23 years for other third-class apprentices. Moreover, the time point obviously has an efficiency bonus. Calculated by doubling the efficiency, it is equivalent to about 50 years for other third-class apprentices. The result is only comparable to the level of a fourth-class apprentice. Is this appropriate? It is written in the book that a normal third-class apprentice can easily be promoted to a formal wizard within twenty years without the help of external objects. In the past fifty years, the protagonist has efficiently mastered 7 will runes (10 is the peak apprenticeship), and has not learned many witchcraft. So where have the protagonist's cheat points been wasted? If you don't want the protagonist to level up too quickly, don't make the plug-in time point so easy to obtain at the beginning, otherwise it will become a poisonous point!
It has a common wizard steamship opening with a bit of Harry Potter style dormitory descriptions and strange-flavored beans and other props, and a bad emotional line that looks like an idol drama novel. In the end, it just depends on the author's mood and efforts (cheating and pretense), interspersed with a bit of the knight's path common to wizards and a common careless and brainless male lead.
It's so poisonous that I still come here every now and then.
I don't really like reading this kind of academic book, because I didn't have much interest in Harry Potter at first, and also because it was inexplicably written about a female protagonist from the beginning.
After reading the first twenty chapters, I was immediately overcome by the drug. The entire emotional drama in chapter twenty was disgustingly written. There are enough bugs about the number of days you use your golden finger and your talent, so I won't say more, but this emotional scene really disgusts me. Has the author ever thought that this woman's talent is not very good, but the protagonist's cultivation speed is dozens of times hers? You are the golden finger of the law of time. A person who practices 24 hours a day can take as many days as others. Or is it that this woman's background is so strong that she can catch up with Time Law Golden Finger and force her cultivation speed to only one level lower? Doesn't her family just go up to the sky and stand shoulder to shoulder with the sun?
If your writing skills are not good, don't write about emotions.
It's very poor, full of little nuggets, and very inconsistent.
This kind of book is only suitable for reading. It doesn't make sense logically. It's really stupid to forcefully add inner drama to the protagonist.
Mental strength is too low-evaluate after reading one chapter
According to common sense, the initial mental power of wizards should be at least twice that of ordinary people. Although they are still not fully developed, the mental power of about 0.3 Is too low, and there is no difference in mental power between geniuses with fourth-level talents and others. I don't know what standards are used to classify talents.
What kind of emotional drama does a wizard need to write, and the writing is extremely embarrassing?
Give it a good review, I hope it will be more exciting than the previous books.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(34)Scraped 2mo ago
The framework and plot don't match. At the beginning, the protagonist is placed in the most powerful white wizard organization, and the people around him basically have good intentions towards the protagonist. Then the protagonist is indeed written as a very stubborn person, keeping a low profile in everything and not daring to compete for the first place. Is this plot development appropriate? If the protagonist saves the time points for cheating and doesn't use them until he doesn't need them in the future, that would make sense. Or it makes sense to use the plug-in time points for knowledge accumulation and lay a strong foundation. But the final result is that three years have passed, and there are still about 200 cheat points left, and the strength and knowledge level are only comparable to fourth-level talents. Is this appropriate? The protagonist will definitely get more than 10 cheat points every day just by practicing and meditating. Adding other learning, breathing, emotional changes, etc., He will get at least 20 cheat points every day. What is the concept? It takes three years for the protagonist to study for a third-class talent, which is equivalent to 23 years for other third-class apprentices. Moreover, the time point obviously has an efficiency bonus. Calculated by doubling the efficiency, it is equivalent to about 50 years for other third-class apprentices. The result is only comparable to the level of a fourth-class apprentice. Is this appropriate? It is written in the book that a normal third-class apprentice can easily be promoted to a formal wizard within twenty years without the help of external objects. In the past fifty years, the protagonist has efficiently mastered 7 will runes (10 is the peak apprenticeship), and has not learned many witchcraft. So where have the protagonist's cheat points been wasted? If you don't want the protagonist to level up too quickly, don't make the plug-in time point so easy to obtain at the beginning, otherwise it will become a poisonous point!
It has a common wizard steamship opening with a bit of Harry Potter style dormitory descriptions and strange-flavored beans and other props, and a bad emotional line that looks like an idol drama novel. In the end, it just depends on the author's mood and efforts (cheating and pretense), interspersed with a bit of the knight's path common to wizards and a common careless and brainless male lead.
It's so poisonous that I still come here every now and then.
I don't really like reading this kind of academic book, because I didn't have much interest in Harry Potter at first, and also because it was inexplicably written about a female protagonist from the beginning.
After reading the first twenty chapters, I was immediately overcome by the drug. The entire emotional drama in chapter twenty was disgustingly written. There are enough bugs about the number of days you use your golden finger and your talent, so I won't say more, but this emotional scene really disgusts me. Has the author ever thought that this woman's talent is not very good, but the protagonist's cultivation speed is dozens of times hers? You are the golden finger of the law of time. A person who practices 24 hours a day can take as many days as others. Or is it that this woman's background is so strong that she can catch up with Time Law Golden Finger and force her cultivation speed to only one level lower? Doesn't her family just go up to the sky and stand shoulder to shoulder with the sun?
If your writing skills are not good, don't write about emotions.
It's very poor, full of little nuggets, and very inconsistent.
This kind of book is only suitable for reading. It doesn't make sense logically. It's really stupid to forcefully add inner drama to the protagonist.
Mental strength is too low-evaluate after reading one chapter
According to common sense, the initial mental power of wizards should be at least twice that of ordinary people. Although they are still not fully developed, the mental power of about 0.3 Is too low, and there is no difference in mental power between geniuses with fourth-level talents and others. I don't know what standards are used to classify talents.
What kind of emotional drama does a wizard need to write, and the writing is extremely embarrassing?
Give it a good review, I hope it will be more exciting than the previous books.









