
Daming Escaped to Me
About This Novel
This is the story of a young man who was reincarnated as Zhu Changrun, the sixth son of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty, who received advice from the Warhammer 40k Emperor and used black technology obtained from subspace to conquer the end of the Age of Discovery in the 17th century. The poem says: Born to be lazy and uncultivated, a thunderbolt from the sky drives me away from my hometown. The soul of the soul gets help, a new home, a new life and a new world. When I am in trouble, the three treasures help me, and the fly whisk helps me get out of trouble. When you travel to the immortal world and meet powerful people, you realize that this body is not ordinary.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 6d ago
The wind, the horse, and the cow are not in harmony with each other, and there are many flaws. The only advantage is that I like to imitate ancient people's speech and write poems. The whole article feels forced to blend.
Because the elements of the Ming Dynasty, Warhammer 40k, and the Demon-Free World are sewn together, the thirty chapters of the first volume are mainly to rationalize the basis of the book, so it is not exciting enough. It will be different once we leave Beijing. Please understand.
The writing is quite thoughtful, but why is it just a eunuch?
Thousands of words are condensed into one sentence, why is it a eunuch?
Come on ヽ(≧Д≦)ノ update quickly, I'm already thirsty for votes
end-of-chapter poem
Someone told me that the poem at the end of the chapter seemed unfamiliar. Starting from the second volume, I no longer write poems at the end of chapters, and I have more time to elaborate on the plot and come up with ideas.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 6d ago
The wind, the horse, and the cow are not in harmony with each other, and there are many flaws. The only advantage is that I like to imitate ancient people's speech and write poems. The whole article feels forced to blend.
Because the elements of the Ming Dynasty, Warhammer 40k, and the Demon-Free World are sewn together, the thirty chapters of the first volume are mainly to rationalize the basis of the book, so it is not exciting enough. It will be different once we leave Beijing. Please understand.
The writing is quite thoughtful, but why is it just a eunuch?
Thousands of words are condensed into one sentence, why is it a eunuch?
Come on ヽ(≧Д≦)ノ update quickly, I'm already thirsty for votes
end-of-chapter poem
Someone told me that the poem at the end of the chapter seemed unfamiliar. Starting from the second volume, I no longer write poems at the end of chapters, and I have more time to elaborate on the plot and come up with ideas.









