
When Taking Stock of Qin Ii at the Beginning, the First Emperor Was Stunned!
by Mo Yiyan
About This Novel
Miracles descended from heaven, and countless video screens appeared before the eyes of every dynasty across the long river of history. When Miracle started taking stock of the prodigal son of the dynasty, everyone was shocked! Qin Shihuang: Hu Hai! What a great Hu Hai, I really underestimated you. In just three years, the Qin Dynasty fell apart. Lao Zhu: Zhu Yunwen! ! ! I don't blame you anymore, but you must find this little brat for me! You actually killed so many of our sons! Liu Bang: Lu Pheasant, you are so cruel! Nai Gong's Mrs. Qi! !
Official Sources
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(15)Scraped 2mo ago
opening lightning strike
The second chapter starts with a direct NT, directly changing the ideological struggle of burning books and entrapping Confucianism into Qin Shihuang's method to kill the Confucian apprentices who committed crimes around Fusu, but he did not want Fusu to suffer damage. And also a typo
A bit outrageous
Didn't Zhu Biao die of illness? Why was he poisoned to death?
I recommend this piece of rubbish. I haven't finished reading one chapter and there are a lot of typos.
The subject matter is good, but please understand the history. If the history has been changed, wouldn't it conflict with the book you wrote?
Zhu Biao was poisoned to death by his second son? Although I know there may be unofficial history, it is exactly the same as tomatoes
When writing historical novels, you should read the history carefully, and skip chapters to read it, but it turns out that Zhu Biao was poisoned to death by his second son in the middle of the novel. Where is your brain, author? Where's the logic?
Every time you change the emperor, it's like opening a blind box. You never know what the next emperor will be.
I don't know, what is written in history?
I still like it very much, the subject matter is good!
Rating
Community(0)
Official(15)Scraped 2mo ago
opening lightning strike
The second chapter starts with a direct NT, directly changing the ideological struggle of burning books and entrapping Confucianism into Qin Shihuang's method to kill the Confucian apprentices who committed crimes around Fusu, but he did not want Fusu to suffer damage. And also a typo
A bit outrageous
Didn't Zhu Biao die of illness? Why was he poisoned to death?
I recommend this piece of rubbish. I haven't finished reading one chapter and there are a lot of typos.
The subject matter is good, but please understand the history. If the history has been changed, wouldn't it conflict with the book you wrote?
Zhu Biao was poisoned to death by his second son? Although I know there may be unofficial history, it is exactly the same as tomatoes
When writing historical novels, you should read the history carefully, and skip chapters to read it, but it turns out that Zhu Biao was poisoned to death by his second son in the middle of the novel. Where is your brain, author? Where's the logic?
Every time you change the emperor, it's like opening a blind box. You never know what the next emperor will be.
I don't know, what is written in history?
I still like it very much, the subject matter is good!










