
Spy Blade: I Used the Intelligence System to Kill People Crazy
by Gudeng Sword
About This Novel
[Hardcore Spy War: Action Scenes + Logical Reasoning] Criminal investigation master Lin Yi traveled to 1936 and became an agent of the Military Intelligence Department. He obtained an intelligence system that was refreshed when he killed the enemy. He hunted Japanese spies, aided underground organizations, and fought for national salvation and national rejuvenation. He used his special years of lurking to write a spy war legend that danced on the tip of a knife! His code name is - Shadow Feng! Welcome everyone to the book club: 1057319662 (Gu Lantern Club) to discuss the plot and urge updates!
What Readers Think
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Official(4)Scraped 2d ago
The analysis of the case is well written, but it is not suitable for writing about the Republic of China. It does not capture the flavor of that era. The most important thing is that the author insists on writing that the protagonist is a Communist Party member who wants to find an organization, but neither wants to endure hardship nor sympathizes with the people of that era.
The investigation process was wonderful, but other people were in pain, it was uncomfortable to watch, it was useless to hang up, the commander at the top was upset, and there was inexplicable discomfort everywhere.
The fighting plot is so regular that you don't even know how to attack the enemy in the third direction.
It's okay, but it's a little small.
The intelligence system, if the status is not high enough, it feels useless. The best thing about traveling through that era is to increase the combat power such as headshots. Books in that era are not easy to write. The writing is too fierce. If you kill too many people, you will be banned. In the book I am reading now, in the previous chapter, the protagonist said that he was going to engage in biohazard. In the next chapter, he apologized and said that he could not write it, so he was banned.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 2d ago
The analysis of the case is well written, but it is not suitable for writing about the Republic of China. It does not capture the flavor of that era. The most important thing is that the author insists on writing that the protagonist is a Communist Party member who wants to find an organization, but neither wants to endure hardship nor sympathizes with the people of that era.
The investigation process was wonderful, but other people were in pain, it was uncomfortable to watch, it was useless to hang up, the commander at the top was upset, and there was inexplicable discomfort everywhere.
The fighting plot is so regular that you don't even know how to attack the enemy in the third direction.
It's okay, but it's a little small.
The intelligence system, if the status is not high enough, it feels useless. The best thing about traveling through that era is to increase the combat power such as headshots. Books in that era are not easy to write. The writing is too fierce. If you kill too many people, you will be banned. In the book I am reading now, in the previous chapter, the protagonist said that he was going to engage in biohazard. In the next chapter, he apologized and said that he could not write it, so he was banned.









