
Warhammer: from Planetary Governor
by Shen Muchuan
About This Novel
[Warhammer + Farming + Space Opera] In the 41st millennium, darkness is raging! The human empire lost half of its territory. Millions of planets are invaded by Chaos! Famine is everywhere, crime is rampant, cults are everywhere... The planet Erth, located on the dark side of the empire, is experiencing extreme suffering. Fortunately, the savior Ron has arrived! He awakens the essence of subspace and leads the development of the whole people! Start with a small, ruined territory. Farming, explosives, internal affairs, unifying the planet, building space warriors, forming the Star Sea Fleet, the Great Expedition... When the regent came with an expeditionary fleet to regain the territory. He looked at the extremely prosperous star field and the group of starships that covered the sky, and then looked at his broken spaceships, and he was suddenly confused... Who is the empire?
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(60)Scraped 2d ago
It's really not what I said. The productivity and combat power in this novel are simply at the level of metaphysics. Damn, can you believe that an emperor-level titan can be created casually in a galaxy? In the later period, the more you read, the more you read, and the more you write about productivity, the more fantasy it becomes. I really think of this kind of refreshing farming article, can you change the world view?
Chapter 2 is full of blood-pressure-raising content, and I just gave a speech to get through it lightly. If you can't allow readers to vent their emotions and provide positive feedback, the ratings will give you the same feedback. This is the first time a novel can make people feel blood pressure reaching their temples while reading it, and yet the content is not vented.
There is a book on my bookshelf with the same title as this one, called From the Planetary Governor. Is it the same?
Generally. There are enough 💩s in Warhammer, and the author still stuffs them into them. A piece of space feudal exploitation written by Hammer.
The early writing was very good, but in the middle and later stages, the writing started to get crazy, and it was so boring that I couldn't read it anymore. You can read it within a hundred chapters.
Author, have you written the next one? I have an earth-shattering idea. The plot content of the next chapter allows Guilliman to buy a first-phase house for all the Ultramarines sub-groups. The reason is also very simple. After all, except for Guilliman's 500 Worlds, which has some money, the other Primarchs do not have this purchasing power at all. Of course, another reason is that the Ultramarines have many sub-groups with unknown origins. I don't need to explain the reasons. In this way, these sub-groups will inevitably send people to the City of Light to see their houses. In this way, the protagonist can organize these sub-groups into his own redemption expedition. By the way, because the protagonist has rewarded these sub-groups with a large amount of materials and ammunition, he is in urgent need of a cargo crew to bring the materials back to his own battle group. The boy who sells cans can gain the friendship and long-term freight orders of more than a dozen war groups, which will directly make those nobles completely quit and prepare to seize the few opportunities to live with the Astartes in an open and honest manner. After all, not many could refuse the friendship of one or a dozen Astartes Chapters. How to operate it specifically can be done carefully to try to kill three birds with one stone into one stone xⅹ birds.
Networking in Warhammer 40K? I don't even know how I died. Who knows which piece of program code is not Tzeentch's conspiracy, and which file is not corrupted by Tzeentch?
Long story short, the protagonist is a cowardly loser. In the Warhammer world, how can one survive without the steely will of the Astartes?
A bunch of nonsense, verbose, really disgusting, water, water, water
Real Water, only more than 300 chapters, 200 chapters of nonsense, hydrology
Kuai Mazi, even the landlord's donkey dare not rest like this
Rating
Community(0)
Official(60)Scraped 2d ago
It's really not what I said. The productivity and combat power in this novel are simply at the level of metaphysics. Damn, can you believe that an emperor-level titan can be created casually in a galaxy? In the later period, the more you read, the more you read, and the more you write about productivity, the more fantasy it becomes. I really think of this kind of refreshing farming article, can you change the world view?
Chapter 2 is full of blood-pressure-raising content, and I just gave a speech to get through it lightly. If you can't allow readers to vent their emotions and provide positive feedback, the ratings will give you the same feedback. This is the first time a novel can make people feel blood pressure reaching their temples while reading it, and yet the content is not vented.
There is a book on my bookshelf with the same title as this one, called From the Planetary Governor. Is it the same?
Generally. There are enough 💩s in Warhammer, and the author still stuffs them into them. A piece of space feudal exploitation written by Hammer.
The early writing was very good, but in the middle and later stages, the writing started to get crazy, and it was so boring that I couldn't read it anymore. You can read it within a hundred chapters.
Author, have you written the next one? I have an earth-shattering idea. The plot content of the next chapter allows Guilliman to buy a first-phase house for all the Ultramarines sub-groups. The reason is also very simple. After all, except for Guilliman's 500 Worlds, which has some money, the other Primarchs do not have this purchasing power at all. Of course, another reason is that the Ultramarines have many sub-groups with unknown origins. I don't need to explain the reasons. In this way, these sub-groups will inevitably send people to the City of Light to see their houses. In this way, the protagonist can organize these sub-groups into his own redemption expedition. By the way, because the protagonist has rewarded these sub-groups with a large amount of materials and ammunition, he is in urgent need of a cargo crew to bring the materials back to his own battle group. The boy who sells cans can gain the friendship and long-term freight orders of more than a dozen war groups, which will directly make those nobles completely quit and prepare to seize the few opportunities to live with the Astartes in an open and honest manner. After all, not many could refuse the friendship of one or a dozen Astartes Chapters. How to operate it specifically can be done carefully to try to kill three birds with one stone into one stone xⅹ birds.
Networking in Warhammer 40K? I don't even know how I died. Who knows which piece of program code is not Tzeentch's conspiracy, and which file is not corrupted by Tzeentch?
Long story short, the protagonist is a cowardly loser. In the Warhammer world, how can one survive without the steely will of the Astartes?
A bunch of nonsense, verbose, really disgusting, water, water, water
Real Water, only more than 300 chapters, 200 chapters of nonsense, hydrology
Kuai Mazi, even the landlord's donkey dare not rest like this
Featured in 3 Booklists
Official(3)
[Warhammer + Farming + Space Opera] In the 41st millennium, darkness is raging! The human empire lost half of its territory. Millions of planets are invaded by Chaos! Famine is everywhere, crime is rampant, cults are everywhere... The planet Erth, located on the dark side of the empire, is experiencing extreme suffering. Fortunately, the savior Ron has arrived! He awakens the essence of subspace and leads the development of the whole people! Start with a small, ruined territory. Farming, explosives, internal affairs, unifying the planet, building space warriors, forming the Star Sea Fleet, the Great Expedition... When the regent came with an expeditionary fleet to regain the territory. He looked at the extremely prosperous star field and the starship group that covered the sky and the sun, Looking at my broken spaceships again, I was immediately confused... Who is the empire?




In Warhammer 40k, the protagonist has a status similar to that of the Primarch. He has his own power (no less than 500 Worlds) and can independently extract the power of the Emperor. However, there have been too few updates. Now I basically can't remember what I talked about before. It's very tiring to chase, so let's nourish it first. I have read Chapter 325 so far




A very interesting salvation story. The protagonist is the little sun beside the emperor. He keeps going on expeditions to save the world, and even conquers the black bean sprouts. It is a very lively story.













