
Takeda's Shogunate
About This Novel
Please support the new book "Seizing the Ding in Nine States"! This is fictional history! Thank you very much!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 16d ago
Unified response to the protagonist's personality
Everyone must be dissatisfied with the character of the protagonist, but the protagonist is not a saint. Most of the emperors in history are similar to the protagonist. Moreover, the protagonist was just a wealthy second generation who traveled through time at first. His goal at the beginning was just to survive. Later, as his territory became larger and larger, his true nature was exposed. He played with women, enjoyed himself, and had a lot of fun. In an environment where no one was restrained, it was difficult to rely on self-control among tens of thousands of people. It was almost like asking you to quit smoking. The protagonist is flesh and blood, not an empty saint, a typical egoist, so what he does will only conform to his own thoughts and make himself happy. That's why he blamed Mrs. Ichijo and his eldest son, and didn't think it was his fault. As for the image of a good old man that everyone likes, spreading positive energy, five principles, four virtues and three loves, I can't write it down. If you don't like it, I can only apologize.
The previous content needs to be modified
I will slowly revise the previous content.
No need to read it, it should be written by middle school or high school, there is nothing there. no logic
There is no logic, and the plot is simply forced. Maybe the author feels very good about it, but we didn't feel anything after reading it. We didn't want to read it after 2 chapters.
The character of the protagonist is the highlight, not an ordinary person.
This protagonist is really a scumbag. When I read the book, I always thought, why doesn't this guy die? He's not dead, tsk, what a pity! The principle of time travel is probably too bad, like an ancient savage
Apart from the Kuroda shogunate, is there no novel about someone who ousts the emperor and ascends to power himself?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 16d ago
Unified response to the protagonist's personality
Everyone must be dissatisfied with the character of the protagonist, but the protagonist is not a saint. Most of the emperors in history are similar to the protagonist. Moreover, the protagonist was just a wealthy second generation who traveled through time at first. His goal at the beginning was just to survive. Later, as his territory became larger and larger, his true nature was exposed. He played with women, enjoyed himself, and had a lot of fun. In an environment where no one was restrained, it was difficult to rely on self-control among tens of thousands of people. It was almost like asking you to quit smoking. The protagonist is flesh and blood, not an empty saint, a typical egoist, so what he does will only conform to his own thoughts and make himself happy. That's why he blamed Mrs. Ichijo and his eldest son, and didn't think it was his fault. As for the image of a good old man that everyone likes, spreading positive energy, five principles, four virtues and three loves, I can't write it down. If you don't like it, I can only apologize.
The previous content needs to be modified
I will slowly revise the previous content.
No need to read it, it should be written by middle school or high school, there is nothing there. no logic
There is no logic, and the plot is simply forced. Maybe the author feels very good about it, but we didn't feel anything after reading it. We didn't want to read it after 2 chapters.
The character of the protagonist is the highlight, not an ordinary person.
This protagonist is really a scumbag. When I read the book, I always thought, why doesn't this guy die? He's not dead, tsk, what a pity! The principle of time travel is probably too bad, like an ancient savage
Apart from the Kuroda shogunate, is there no novel about someone who ousts the emperor and ascends to power himself?












