
After Entering the Book, I Got the Wrong Favor and Got into Trouble with the Villain Who Was Criticized so Much!
About This Novel
Gu Qingxuan traveled to a novel of fairy tales and became the cannon fodder of the villainous male protagonist in the novel.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 14d ago
It's still pretty good, but the ending is a little rushed.
Although the book is good, it does not stop me from liking the male protagonist. The female protagonist is very strong and treats the male protagonist very well, paving the way for the male protagonist. With the help of the female protagonist, the male protagonist rarely suffers any setbacks. After all, no matter what difficult situation, the female protagonist is by his side. It is also because of the female protagonist that the male protagonist can feel loved and trusted, so there is a little hindrance in practicing the magic method. As long as I think about the male protagonist only cooking for the female protagonist (the fire lotus porridge in the first month was for the female protagonist's health, but it was to prepare the female protagonist for pregnancy in the future, cough), I win over the female protagonist's heart. I'm really a little upset. I have no choice. Who made me care about it? I really feel that what the male protagonist does to the female protagonist is not one-tenth of what the female protagonist does for him, but the female protagonist doesn't think there is anything wrong with it. In order to save his brother's fiancée, he did not listen to the advice of the heroine, causing the heroine to become a demon. This is distrust. Although the hero had no love for the heroine at that time, after all, the heroine exchanged the favorability of the hero for a skill, but was it not to save the hero's relatives? Was she wrong? If the male protagonist hadn't destroyed the female protagonist's companion magic weapon, the Green Lotus Lantern, the female protagonist would have almost died due to the damage to her strength, so she could use her favorability points to redeem her skills and get out of adversity? Maybe it's because I have colored glasses towards the male protagonist. I'm wrong, but I won't change it.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 14d ago
It's still pretty good, but the ending is a little rushed.
Although the book is good, it does not stop me from liking the male protagonist. The female protagonist is very strong and treats the male protagonist very well, paving the way for the male protagonist. With the help of the female protagonist, the male protagonist rarely suffers any setbacks. After all, no matter what difficult situation, the female protagonist is by his side. It is also because of the female protagonist that the male protagonist can feel loved and trusted, so there is a little hindrance in practicing the magic method. As long as I think about the male protagonist only cooking for the female protagonist (the fire lotus porridge in the first month was for the female protagonist's health, but it was to prepare the female protagonist for pregnancy in the future, cough), I win over the female protagonist's heart. I'm really a little upset. I have no choice. Who made me care about it? I really feel that what the male protagonist does to the female protagonist is not one-tenth of what the female protagonist does for him, but the female protagonist doesn't think there is anything wrong with it. In order to save his brother's fiancée, he did not listen to the advice of the heroine, causing the heroine to become a demon. This is distrust. Although the hero had no love for the heroine at that time, after all, the heroine exchanged the favorability of the hero for a skill, but was it not to save the hero's relatives? Was she wrong? If the male protagonist hadn't destroyed the female protagonist's companion magic weapon, the Green Lotus Lantern, the female protagonist would have almost died due to the damage to her strength, so she could use her favorability points to redeem her skills and get out of adversity? Maybe it's because I have colored glasses towards the male protagonist. I'm wrong, but I won't change it.






