
People in Naruto Can Go to Infinite Worlds
by Keyine
About This Novel
It sounds outrageous that a Konoha commoner with no chakra talent could become the leader of the Uchiha clan. But Lei Qinjiu just did it. At the beginning, he was an orphan, with poor talent and chakra waste. He should have died at the bottom, but he relied on the plot to travel all the way to the Uchiha bloodline, seize power and become the Hokage. Travel through the plot world, complete tasks, and gain plot points. Physical fitness, swordsmanship, ninjutsu, secret skills, blood inheritance limits, all can be changed... Completed World: Plague Cruise The Year of the Shadow: The End of the Wolf King
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Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
Tell me your feelings about the plot of the copy
The writing of the copy is getting more and more "boring", and I have begun to feel so boring that I can't help but skip the plot. That being said, the first copy is still beautifully written. At that time, the protagonist could be regarded as a "weak" in the absolute sense. The feeling of a weak person surviving in the cracks was vividly described by the author, and the sense of immersion was directly filled, which was quite exciting. But the feeling of the latter two copies is much different. Of course, the protagonist cannot be called a strong person after experiencing the first dungeon, but he is definitely not a weak person in the world of dungeons. Then the author forcibly weakens the protagonist (chakra restrictions or even system task restrictions) in order to allow the protagonist to enter his dungeon plot from a relatively weak perspective. This is really a bit embarrassing🙃, it makes sense🤔, it's 2026, and such a photo is really retro🙄 In other words, the author's writing style is really good, otherwise I would have wanted to scold him. Especially the second dungeon is full of forced puzzle solving. This is even more outrageous, and feels completely out of line with the theme of the book (I may be nit-picking on this, but it's really how I feel). You can feel that the author seems to be playing a big game. After all, the weakening of the protagonist in these dungeons is not blind. If you practice in this situation, you can clearly feel that the protagonist is silently strengthening in some aspects. But to be honest, this way of writing is too anti-market, and completely runs counter to the current market for cool articles. I don't know what the current score of this book is, but I just want to ask: Does the author have the confidence to persist until the day when all the foreshadowing is completed? I can persevere with the author's writing style, but I'm afraid the author himself won't be able to persevere that day (◕ˇ∀ˇ◕)
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
Tell me your feelings about the plot of the copy
The writing of the copy is getting more and more "boring", and I have begun to feel so boring that I can't help but skip the plot. That being said, the first copy is still beautifully written. At that time, the protagonist could be regarded as a "weak" in the absolute sense. The feeling of a weak person surviving in the cracks was vividly described by the author, and the sense of immersion was directly filled, which was quite exciting. But the feeling of the latter two copies is much different. Of course, the protagonist cannot be called a strong person after experiencing the first dungeon, but he is definitely not a weak person in the world of dungeons. Then the author forcibly weakens the protagonist (chakra restrictions or even system task restrictions) in order to allow the protagonist to enter his dungeon plot from a relatively weak perspective. This is really a bit embarrassing🙃, it makes sense🤔, it's 2026, and such a photo is really retro🙄 In other words, the author's writing style is really good, otherwise I would have wanted to scold him. Especially the second dungeon is full of forced puzzle solving. This is even more outrageous, and feels completely out of line with the theme of the book (I may be nit-picking on this, but it's really how I feel). You can feel that the author seems to be playing a big game. After all, the weakening of the protagonist in these dungeons is not blind. If you practice in this situation, you can clearly feel that the protagonist is silently strengthening in some aspects. But to be honest, this way of writing is too anti-market, and completely runs counter to the current market for cool articles. I don't know what the current score of this book is, but I just want to ask: Does the author have the confidence to persist until the day when all the foreshadowing is completed? I can persevere with the author's writing style, but I'm afraid the author himself won't be able to persevere that day (◕ˇ∀ˇ◕)









