
Daming: Lao Zhu Begged Me for Corruption!
by The Sun And The Moon Move In The Sky
About This Novel
Staff: "Sir, 2.2 Million taels of silver were confiscated from my house in this case. I will report 2 million taels to the emperor and we will keep 200,000?" Zhu Cheng: "How can that be done? It's too much! Give Lao Zhu 20,000 to 20,000, and we'll keep the rest!" Staff: ... Brother-in-law: Brother-in-law, this warship costs 3,000 taels. Can we give the higher-up a quote of 3,000 taels? Zhu Cheng: Are you mentally ill? You pay 30,000 for something worth 3,000? Give me thirty million taels!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(41)Scraped 9d ago
Rubbish
I beg you, is corruption possible? Let's get to know Zhu Yuanzhang first. No matter how talented you are, he will not let you become corrupt. At most, he will only give you more rewards.
Accepted
I admire the author's imagination. Lao Zhu grew up eating hard food, letting cows go, and worked as a monk to earn a living. He is an emperor born from the bottom. No one understands the people better than him, and no one hates corruption more than him.
Does the author write a book without checking the information?
Historical data states that the Hu Weiyong case occurred during Zhu Biao's lifetime, but in the book Zhu Biao is dead, and Hu Weiyong is still alive. This is a huge departure.
I can't stand reading the introduction.
Lao Zhu was the first to encourage people to sue officials. For corruption, sixty taels are peeled off. If you serve as an official cleanly and have a clean breeze, Lao Zhu may give you some rewards. I beg you for corruption. Lao Zhu has been fighting corruption all his life.
It's too fake. In Zhu Yuanzhang's style, anyone who steals 60 taels of silver will be beheaded. In his time, businessmen did not dare to be arrogant at all, and he hated corruption the most. It was impossible to persuade others to commit corruption unless he could not find a reason to kill people.
You can't even recognize an old man from your own father. Are you stupid?
. . .
Do your introduction and content match?
A bit silly
I feel like the protagonist is a bit brainless. It's impossible that he's alone in the court and doesn't notice it at all?
When I read the introduction, I didn't think it was that good.
Bad review
It's boring. Is this how it was written in the Ming Dynasty? It feels like everyone becomes wise once the protagonist arrives.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(41)Scraped 9d ago
Rubbish
I beg you, is corruption possible? Let's get to know Zhu Yuanzhang first. No matter how talented you are, he will not let you become corrupt. At most, he will only give you more rewards.
Accepted
I admire the author's imagination. Lao Zhu grew up eating hard food, letting cows go, and worked as a monk to earn a living. He is an emperor born from the bottom. No one understands the people better than him, and no one hates corruption more than him.
Does the author write a book without checking the information?
Historical data states that the Hu Weiyong case occurred during Zhu Biao's lifetime, but in the book Zhu Biao is dead, and Hu Weiyong is still alive. This is a huge departure.
I can't stand reading the introduction.
Lao Zhu was the first to encourage people to sue officials. For corruption, sixty taels are peeled off. If you serve as an official cleanly and have a clean breeze, Lao Zhu may give you some rewards. I beg you for corruption. Lao Zhu has been fighting corruption all his life.
It's too fake. In Zhu Yuanzhang's style, anyone who steals 60 taels of silver will be beheaded. In his time, businessmen did not dare to be arrogant at all, and he hated corruption the most. It was impossible to persuade others to commit corruption unless he could not find a reason to kill people.
You can't even recognize an old man from your own father. Are you stupid?
. . .
Do your introduction and content match?
A bit silly
I feel like the protagonist is a bit brainless. It's impossible that he's alone in the court and doesn't notice it at all?
When I read the introduction, I didn't think it was that good.
Bad review
It's boring. Is this how it was written in the Ming Dynasty? It feels like everyone becomes wise once the protagonist arrives.









