
From Pioneer Lord to King
by Pupil
About This Novel
The normal thought of "picking up" Goldfinger: "Punch the orc, kick the pope, marry Bai Fumei and reach the pinnacle of life!" The thoughts of the science and engineering dog Ryan: "Gathering food and guns, growing insignificantly, and surviving until the last wave of stud!" When grain was piled into mountains, new-style cavalry galloped on the grasslands, and countries prostrate themselves at his feet. Ryan sat on the high throne, looked around, slowly raised a middle finger and said: "Who else?" (Lord Farming Story, No Harem, Exploratory Golden Finger)
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(13)Scraped 13d ago
I have read more than 30 pieces and expressed my opinion. How can I say that the gap between it and the King One written by Xin Haiyue is not that big! The main character in this book, who is also a member of the Travelers, always wants to change the rules of the world and talks about trying to make things worse for others (most of the Travelers don't like it, so they have to change it). He is obviously a member of the aristocratic class and is a beneficiary, but he still goes against the will of heaven (he needs to be a concubine and have a memorial arch). Mr. Hudson, the protagonist of the king, has never wanted to change the rules of the world. It is also a noble family who actively integrates into it and enjoys the privileges of the nobility while also giving a better life to the serfs in the territory! This is a matter of structure. If the protagonist of this book does not have a golden finger, he will not be able to survive three episodes in another world. What's the point of being an aristocrat in an extraordinary world and enjoying aristocratic privileges while thinking about breaking out of class all day long (you can't stand the life of the common people at the bottom)? Idealist?
silence
After reading three chapters, they are all at war. After looking at the table of contents of more than 80 chapters, most of them still have nothing to do with farming. . . .
After reading Chapter 30 or 40, I felt strange. The protagonist always "fantasised" and felt that his ideas were too childish and naive. I can't even understand what my opponents are saying. The author's war plot is still good, but his thinking is a bit too childish. I don't really like this kind of 'saint' who wants to change the world. And I don't think this kind of logic can work in a world where great power belongs to itself. The elite Chaofan are all from the upper ruling class, but the protagonist wants to give some of the benefits of the ruling class to the common people. The cornerstone of the protagonist's maintenance of governance is his aristocratic status, and his subordinate Chaofan follows the protagonist because he wants to become a noble. How is such a logical relationship maintained? A manager works for the boss because of money, but now he has to use performance to pay wages to the employees below?
Climb the technology tree
A man from science and engineering travels through time and there is no system. How can you climb up the technological tree?
It's beautiful (♥∀♥), it's my favorite type, and I'm looking forward to the follow-up content! Come on ✊ Come on ✊ Come on ✊
I'm sick. I broke it off halfway through writing. I'm seriously ill.
5555
You are not fit to be the protagonist of this world. You are not supposed to live in a medieval world full of magic and blood. But living in a peaceful world, there are equally beautiful people. You've said from the beginning that you don't like war. So why don't you stay and work on your own little piece of land and daydream about the beautiful world? Or do you comfort the slaves on the land to rest and work on their own? 55555555 And why did you create a weapon that can kill people with magical powers and can be used by ordinary people? You don't have to say what it is, you can guess it. Why did you do this? Why? All you do is ruin your class. You are an aristocrat and your power and privileges come from class. Your followers serve you because you are Khun Khang. They want to be noble. But what did you do to create a weapon that could kill someone with the magical power your class was based on? The nobility of that world didn't have much class rigidity. Ordinary people could climb it if they were lucky enough, born with magical powers, and contributed enough to the war effort. But the weapons you create can be used by ordinary people, and they can also be created by ordinary people. It is not like the magic scroll used by ordinary people, but requires a high-level mage to make it. You are the protagonist of a beautiful world. Betray your class and betray your followers.
Really not bad
Now that I have seen 134 pictures, it is obvious that the author's goal of this book is definitely not limited to this continent or planet. Everyone is extraordinary, and magical and technological things have also surfaced one after another. Although it seems that our protagonist is still far away from this stage, it is definitely worth looking forward to.
If you don't like the start, just put poison in it, the setting is also bad
After reading more than twenty chapters, I feel that the plot is not interesting enough, or not attractive enough!
Rating
Community(0)
Official(13)Scraped 13d ago
I have read more than 30 pieces and expressed my opinion. How can I say that the gap between it and the King One written by Xin Haiyue is not that big! The main character in this book, who is also a member of the Travelers, always wants to change the rules of the world and talks about trying to make things worse for others (most of the Travelers don't like it, so they have to change it). He is obviously a member of the aristocratic class and is a beneficiary, but he still goes against the will of heaven (he needs to be a concubine and have a memorial arch). Mr. Hudson, the protagonist of the king, has never wanted to change the rules of the world. It is also a noble family who actively integrates into it and enjoys the privileges of the nobility while also giving a better life to the serfs in the territory! This is a matter of structure. If the protagonist of this book does not have a golden finger, he will not be able to survive three episodes in another world. What's the point of being an aristocrat in an extraordinary world and enjoying aristocratic privileges while thinking about breaking out of class all day long (you can't stand the life of the common people at the bottom)? Idealist?
silence
After reading three chapters, they are all at war. After looking at the table of contents of more than 80 chapters, most of them still have nothing to do with farming. . . .
After reading Chapter 30 or 40, I felt strange. The protagonist always "fantasised" and felt that his ideas were too childish and naive. I can't even understand what my opponents are saying. The author's war plot is still good, but his thinking is a bit too childish. I don't really like this kind of 'saint' who wants to change the world. And I don't think this kind of logic can work in a world where great power belongs to itself. The elite Chaofan are all from the upper ruling class, but the protagonist wants to give some of the benefits of the ruling class to the common people. The cornerstone of the protagonist's maintenance of governance is his aristocratic status, and his subordinate Chaofan follows the protagonist because he wants to become a noble. How is such a logical relationship maintained? A manager works for the boss because of money, but now he has to use performance to pay wages to the employees below?
Climb the technology tree
A man from science and engineering travels through time and there is no system. How can you climb up the technological tree?
It's beautiful (♥∀♥), it's my favorite type, and I'm looking forward to the follow-up content! Come on ✊ Come on ✊ Come on ✊
I'm sick. I broke it off halfway through writing. I'm seriously ill.
5555
You are not fit to be the protagonist of this world. You are not supposed to live in a medieval world full of magic and blood. But living in a peaceful world, there are equally beautiful people. You've said from the beginning that you don't like war. So why don't you stay and work on your own little piece of land and daydream about the beautiful world? Or do you comfort the slaves on the land to rest and work on their own? 55555555 And why did you create a weapon that can kill people with magical powers and can be used by ordinary people? You don't have to say what it is, you can guess it. Why did you do this? Why? All you do is ruin your class. You are an aristocrat and your power and privileges come from class. Your followers serve you because you are Khun Khang. They want to be noble. But what did you do to create a weapon that could kill someone with the magical power your class was based on? The nobility of that world didn't have much class rigidity. Ordinary people could climb it if they were lucky enough, born with magical powers, and contributed enough to the war effort. But the weapons you create can be used by ordinary people, and they can also be created by ordinary people. It is not like the magic scroll used by ordinary people, but requires a high-level mage to make it. You are the protagonist of a beautiful world. Betray your class and betray your followers.
Really not bad
Now that I have seen 134 pictures, it is obvious that the author's goal of this book is definitely not limited to this continent or planet. Everyone is extraordinary, and magical and technological things have also surfaced one after another. Although it seems that our protagonist is still far away from this stage, it is definitely worth looking forward to.
If you don't like the start, just put poison in it, the setting is also bad
After reading more than twenty chapters, I feel that the plot is not interesting enough, or not attractive enough!









