
Be Invincible from the Moment You Shine Your Sword
About This Novel
Li Yunlong: "Third Battalion Commander, where is your Italian cannon? Pull it over to me." Zhang Lei: "It's the regiment commander!" Li Yunlong: "Third Battalion Commander, where is your cavalry company? Chase Yamamoto Kazuki and kill him!" Zhang Lei: "Okay!" Kong Jie: "Good guy , Zhang Lei's third battalion actually has an artillery company?" Chu Yunfei: "Battle Commander Zhang, my batch of equipment..." Yamamoto Kazuki: "Baga, quickly block the city gate, that super thunder is coming!" This is the story of special soldier Zhang Lei fighting the Japanese in the world of bright swords. Zhang Lei said that he had ten thousand ways to kill the Japanese.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(54)Scraped 4d ago
The more I write, the worse it becomes
When writing about foreign affairs, there is no sense of immersion at all. You might as well keep writing about domestic affairs, until the founding of the People's Republic of China, or until the War to Resist U. S. Aggression and Aid Korea.
Are there any anti-war stories that have super strong individual soldiers, like to work alone, and at the same time do not explode troops, do not have advanced weapon technology and other garbage settings? Similar to the sniper book.
A bit of a blow. But it's fun to watch.
Modern special forces cannot destroy a regiment with ten men. The anti-Japanese drama is considered a work of conscience to you.
A good book, it successfully made me sick
Once this book is on the shelves, it means it is over. Eighty percent of the plot has nothing to do with the protagonist. Who is willing to spend money to read it? Might as well watch Bright Sword again
. . ,. .
What grade is the author in? Does he not know how to use punctuation?
Too much nonsense. He's not the main character for several chapters in a row!
It felt okay at first, but around chapter 25, I felt like the author was doing a lot of things that had nothing to do with the protagonist.
Let Zhang Lei grow up quickly. The credit cannot always be someone else's.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(54)Scraped 4d ago
The more I write, the worse it becomes
When writing about foreign affairs, there is no sense of immersion at all. You might as well keep writing about domestic affairs, until the founding of the People's Republic of China, or until the War to Resist U. S. Aggression and Aid Korea.
Are there any anti-war stories that have super strong individual soldiers, like to work alone, and at the same time do not explode troops, do not have advanced weapon technology and other garbage settings? Similar to the sniper book.
A bit of a blow. But it's fun to watch.
Modern special forces cannot destroy a regiment with ten men. The anti-Japanese drama is considered a work of conscience to you.
A good book, it successfully made me sick
Once this book is on the shelves, it means it is over. Eighty percent of the plot has nothing to do with the protagonist. Who is willing to spend money to read it? Might as well watch Bright Sword again
. . ,. .
What grade is the author in? Does he not know how to use punctuation?
Too much nonsense. He's not the main character for several chapters in a row!
It felt okay at first, but around chapter 25, I felt like the author was doing a lot of things that had nothing to do with the protagonist.
Let Zhang Lei grow up quickly. The credit cannot always be someone else's.



























