
All the Unofficial Stories I Made up Came True
About This Novel
[Usurping history comes true, reshaping civilization] Lu Bai obtained a "History Writer" that could tamper with the past, and the unofficial history that he typed at random would become a reality. Newton became the exiled prince of the Ming Dynasty, Leonardo da Vinci was the painter who smuggled across Zheng He's fleet, and the "System Instructions" engraved in simplified Chinese characters were unearthed from Wang Mang's tomb. As the number of believers across the network skyrocketed, cultural relics were automatically unearthed, and even textbooks began to be changed.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 1d ago
The foreshadowing is pretty good, but once you get to Gao Chao, you just brush it off in an understatement. It's not exciting at all and feels like it starts at the end but ends at the end.
I was looking forward to it in vain, the gap between before and after it was released was too big.
It's okay up front, but it doesn't work when it comes to the charge stamp.
The excitement is not enough, the expectation is in vain.
In addition, the characterization is not very good. It feels a bit confusing at first, and then abrupt. Overall, it is too bland, not exciting, and has no sense of immersion. Another digression. If you had the same golden finger as the protagonist of this book, what would you use it for?
Did the author cut it?
The writing is very detailed, but the plot line is confusing, and it feels like the author's framework is too broad and cannot be controlled.
Bored, boring, boring, boring, boring, boring
Come on, come on, come on, work hard, work hard, update
The writing has been messy since the beginning of Leonardo da Vinci, trying to give readers their own thoughts. As a result, what should have been a gradual process has been turned into a half-baked hodgepodge. Each chapter has several group portraits cut here and there without any trace of "life". Several characters seem to be acting out the outline. In the end, not only the writing is messed up, but the readers are also tired of reading it.
Is the Mengxihe site in Sichuan caused by your rewriting of history?
Blah blah blah blah, blah blah blah blah, blah blah blah, blah blah, clinging to you every minute, how important you are to me
Rating
Community(0)
Official(9)Scraped 1d ago
The foreshadowing is pretty good, but once you get to Gao Chao, you just brush it off in an understatement. It's not exciting at all and feels like it starts at the end but ends at the end.
I was looking forward to it in vain, the gap between before and after it was released was too big.
It's okay up front, but it doesn't work when it comes to the charge stamp.
The excitement is not enough, the expectation is in vain.
In addition, the characterization is not very good. It feels a bit confusing at first, and then abrupt. Overall, it is too bland, not exciting, and has no sense of immersion. Another digression. If you had the same golden finger as the protagonist of this book, what would you use it for?
Did the author cut it?
The writing is very detailed, but the plot line is confusing, and it feels like the author's framework is too broad and cannot be controlled.
Bored, boring, boring, boring, boring, boring
Come on, come on, come on, work hard, work hard, update
The writing has been messy since the beginning of Leonardo da Vinci, trying to give readers their own thoughts. As a result, what should have been a gradual process has been turned into a half-baked hodgepodge. Each chapter has several group portraits cut here and there without any trace of "life". Several characters seem to be acting out the outline. In the end, not only the writing is messed up, but the readers are also tired of reading it.
Is the Mengxihe site in Sichuan caused by your rewriting of history?
Blah blah blah blah, blah blah blah blah, blah blah blah, blah blah, clinging to you every minute, how important you are to me













