
Dragon Soul Lord
by Thousands Of Miles Of Wind And Sand
About This Novel
His father died tragically under a dragon, but Lance Parker unexpectedly became the Dragon Soul Lord. Lance, who became the Dragon Soul Knight, discovered that he had a summoning circle in his mind that could summon extraordinary beings through specific materials. With this, Lance will step by step embark on the road of promotion to the title, establish a principality, and build an empire.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 8d ago
🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮
The protagonist is rather silly and overly idealistic. For example, when I went hunting for monsters, I accidentally stepped on a branch, and the monster escaped again. And the thing about building houses - what do you want to build skyscrapers for? If you like high-rise buildings, then write novels in the modern world or the future world. Why write novels with a medieval setting? In beautiful medieval cities, ordinary houses usually only have two or three floors, and only some special buildings such as magic towers are taller. Otherwise, if the city is full of high-rise buildings, you will not be able to see the city from the window of the castle you built, and you may not even be able to see the city walls or the golden wheat fields outside the city. Because those tall buildings are taller than your castle! Let's talk about the materials you use to build houses for people in the city - you actually use magic bricks, and the main component of this brick is a magic ore worth more than 100 gold coins. Only wealthy businessmen or nobles can afford such a house, and you actually plan to ask people in the city to pay in installments or even give it away for free? How many generations will it take to pay off this debt? According to the setting in the story, 50 gold coins can equip 100 soldiers with complete weapons and equipment. However, the protagonist himself is not rich and has not even started collecting taxes. He only has 200 gold coins and a small magic mine. In the end, he sells the mine to the enemy and the other party lowers the price. He is really hopelessly stupid! Besides, building tall buildings in a medieval fantasy world is just plain stupid. There are so many factors that could cause a building to collapse, killing everyone in the building. Even in the real world, tall buildings can be severely damaged or even collapse if an earthquake occurs. In a fantasy world, individuals are often extremely powerful and the dangers multiply. This design is neither beautiful nor safe, and even the protagonist's IQ is unacceptable!
He has to suppress the protagonist at every turn, and arranges enemies with people who are stronger than the protagonist time and time again. Goldfinger is obviously very good, but in the end, he relies on luck every time to survive. He is obviously at level three, but his opponent is either level six or level seven. Sixth-level fire dragon, leader of the seventh-level knights of light, third prince of the kingdom, only Chapter 70. As a third-level baron, your enemy is a bit outrageous.
What the hell, the prince openly murdered the baron and was counterattacked!
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 8d ago
🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮
The protagonist is rather silly and overly idealistic. For example, when I went hunting for monsters, I accidentally stepped on a branch, and the monster escaped again. And the thing about building houses - what do you want to build skyscrapers for? If you like high-rise buildings, then write novels in the modern world or the future world. Why write novels with a medieval setting? In beautiful medieval cities, ordinary houses usually only have two or three floors, and only some special buildings such as magic towers are taller. Otherwise, if the city is full of high-rise buildings, you will not be able to see the city from the window of the castle you built, and you may not even be able to see the city walls or the golden wheat fields outside the city. Because those tall buildings are taller than your castle! Let's talk about the materials you use to build houses for people in the city - you actually use magic bricks, and the main component of this brick is a magic ore worth more than 100 gold coins. Only wealthy businessmen or nobles can afford such a house, and you actually plan to ask people in the city to pay in installments or even give it away for free? How many generations will it take to pay off this debt? According to the setting in the story, 50 gold coins can equip 100 soldiers with complete weapons and equipment. However, the protagonist himself is not rich and has not even started collecting taxes. He only has 200 gold coins and a small magic mine. In the end, he sells the mine to the enemy and the other party lowers the price. He is really hopelessly stupid! Besides, building tall buildings in a medieval fantasy world is just plain stupid. There are so many factors that could cause a building to collapse, killing everyone in the building. Even in the real world, tall buildings can be severely damaged or even collapse if an earthquake occurs. In a fantasy world, individuals are often extremely powerful and the dangers multiply. This design is neither beautiful nor safe, and even the protagonist's IQ is unacceptable!
He has to suppress the protagonist at every turn, and arranges enemies with people who are stronger than the protagonist time and time again. Goldfinger is obviously very good, but in the end, he relies on luck every time to survive. He is obviously at level three, but his opponent is either level six or level seven. Sixth-level fire dragon, leader of the seventh-level knights of light, third prince of the kingdom, only Chapter 70. As a third-level baron, your enemy is a bit outrageous.
What the hell, the prince openly murdered the baron and was counterattacked!









