
Three Kingdoms: Beginning with the Abduction of Dong Zhuo's Red Rabbit
by Only Sparkling Wine Accepted
About This Novel
[Traveling through the Three Kingdoms] [Unsystematic] [Heroes vying for the throne] Traveling through the late Han Dynasty, Wei Zheng received an imperial edict asking him to enter the palace to diagnose Liu Hong. It's a joke, the original person has been stupid for more than ten years, and everyone in the court knows it! At the moment, it's just to let him enter the palace and become a pawn to check and balance the government. Is it dormant? Or give it a try? However, is the courage of an ordinary man the way to go in troubled times? The brightest stars in history are waving to him: 800 miles away in Changshan to find Zhao Yun, there is still a glimmer of hope in the desperate situation! He ran a thousand miles to rescue Zhang Liao, eight hundred tigers marched across the river, and one hundred thousand Wu soldiers returned in fear! Why did Chitu, the most powerful horse in the world, appear next to Wei Zheng? As for beauties... Haha, the only ones with outstanding vision in the world are Zheng and Caoer!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 3d ago
He is obviously an invincible protagonist, but he has to engage in a battle of wits. He is even more arrogant than Lu Bu in the novel. He always feels that he can control everything, but he falls over every time. He never succeeds, and almost loses it several times. He still feels good about himself, and the battle of wits is not well written. It really complies with that sentence. The protagonist's IQ is equal to the author's IQ.
In the first chapter, I was persuaded to quit. Ma Tie was exchanged for Red Rabbit, just like a tank was exchanged for a motorcycle.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 3d ago
He is obviously an invincible protagonist, but he has to engage in a battle of wits. He is even more arrogant than Lu Bu in the novel. He always feels that he can control everything, but he falls over every time. He never succeeds, and almost loses it several times. He still feels good about himself, and the battle of wits is not well written. It really complies with that sentence. The protagonist's IQ is equal to the author's IQ.
In the first chapter, I was persuaded to quit. Ma Tie was exchanged for Red Rabbit, just like a tank was exchanged for a motorcycle.









