
The Person is in Hogwarts, and the System is in the Lord of the Rings!
by White Robe Wizard Dumbledore
About This Novel
People are in Hogwarts, awakening to the Middle-earth survival system, but something is not right with the system... [You have received the Hogwarts admission notice-obtained the main mission: Fellowship of the Ring! [Not only did you not go to Gryffindor, you also entered Hufflepuff, a place where everyone is busy - get the reward: Hobbit racial talent (Stealth + Gluttony)! [You refused Malfoy's handshake - get reward: Strength +1 (you should be so tough when dealing with fallen elves)! [Your wand swings powerfully - get rewarded: a two-handed sword strike (the mage should have some strength)! The system actually thought I was in Middle-earth in Lord of the Rings? ! ... Many years later. Voldemort led an army of Death Eaters to attack Hogwarts. Before the Dark Lord could finish reciting Avada Kedavra, Rowe Baggins had already rushed in front of him with the Holy Sword of Nasir, and hit him with a pan in his backhand. "Shut up, Sauron! You have no body, and you are only worthy of smelling the ashes at the bottom of my pot!" "Also, don't call me a wizard, please call me the Sword Master of Middle-earth."
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What Readers Think
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Official(10)Scraped 28d ago
It's okay to abandon one chapter and force the system to take over. There is a novel about a system takeover. The system only takes over the battle. Your system will take over everything. Why do you want a protagonist? Tool? Is the system the ontology?
What did you write JB? Shouldn't you be breaking up with the system?
Disgusting🤢, my life has been taken over by the system and I have no sense of autonomy.
The author is really crazy in his writing, awesome and awesome
They have all finished spraying the system, so I sprayed the point of deducting plot points. Hufflepuff and the others really don't necessarily care about that score. Even if no points were deducted, Hufflepuff would still not be ranked first.
Well, I quite like this book. I was speechless at first because the protagonist's senses were forcibly changed. There are also many times where the protagonist cannot use prophecy to make up for all the regrets as much as possible like the protagonists in other books. Well, the main reason is that Cedric died a hundred million times again, which is very annoying. However, this kind of disgust is more like a powerless feeling of knowing the outcome but not being able to change the ending. It feels like the protagonist has been in vain. But if you look closely, it feels like everyone is more or less affected and changed. I don't know if I will still like this book if I read it again in the future, but I quite like it now😘 Salute to you, Dumbledore's white robe, I wish you find your own Grindelwald🤡🤡🤡 Charge for Rohan 😫😫😫
Don't listen to what others say here, the protagonist is equivalent to having a cognitive filter. Recognizing things around you as something else. The system can regard it as the kind that cannot complete the task and erase it.
He looked a little speechless and felt like a schizophrenic.
It's really hard for normal people to comment on a normal protagonist.
What we are saying is that the protagonist can't have some sense. He can do those things for the sake of completing tasks, not because he is irrational. He can't help himself and his words are insincere. Wouldn't it be better if the protagonist is normal when he is not on task?
I won't give you any points just by looking at the beginning, but this kind of mandatory mission system is really not very good nowadays.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(10)Scraped 28d ago
It's okay to abandon one chapter and force the system to take over. There is a novel about a system takeover. The system only takes over the battle. Your system will take over everything. Why do you want a protagonist? Tool? Is the system the ontology?
What did you write JB? Shouldn't you be breaking up with the system?
Disgusting🤢, my life has been taken over by the system and I have no sense of autonomy.
The author is really crazy in his writing, awesome and awesome
They have all finished spraying the system, so I sprayed the point of deducting plot points. Hufflepuff and the others really don't necessarily care about that score. Even if no points were deducted, Hufflepuff would still not be ranked first.
Well, I quite like this book. I was speechless at first because the protagonist's senses were forcibly changed. There are also many times where the protagonist cannot use prophecy to make up for all the regrets as much as possible like the protagonists in other books. Well, the main reason is that Cedric died a hundred million times again, which is very annoying. However, this kind of disgust is more like a powerless feeling of knowing the outcome but not being able to change the ending. It feels like the protagonist has been in vain. But if you look closely, it feels like everyone is more or less affected and changed. I don't know if I will still like this book if I read it again in the future, but I quite like it now😘 Salute to you, Dumbledore's white robe, I wish you find your own Grindelwald🤡🤡🤡 Charge for Rohan 😫😫😫
Don't listen to what others say here, the protagonist is equivalent to having a cognitive filter. Recognizing things around you as something else. The system can regard it as the kind that cannot complete the task and erase it.
He looked a little speechless and felt like a schizophrenic.
It's really hard for normal people to comment on a normal protagonist.
What we are saying is that the protagonist can't have some sense. He can do those things for the sake of completing tasks, not because he is irrational. He can't help himself and his words are insincere. Wouldn't it be better if the protagonist is normal when he is not on task?
I won't give you any points just by looking at the beginning, but this kind of mandatory mission system is really not very good nowadays.









