
Divine Plan? but I Am a Pokémon Trainer
About This Novel
Link, who traveled to the Hoenn region of the Pokémon world, mentioned the system, but his system was undoubtedly wrong - [This summer, you attended the summer camp with your classmates Takuma Hyakushu and Minoru Hyuga, but wandered into the sea of flowers on the other side and encountered a strange creature called the "Beast God". ][In a desperate situation, the professor sacrificed himself to give the students a chance to escape. You panicked and fled into the fog.][The good times did not last long, and mysterious creatures attacked again. By chance, you picked up a slightly familiar mysterious machine and awakened the half of your soul. ] [The violent impact and white light make you fall into a coma, and when you wake up again, you have already appeared in another world...] "Appearing in another world is true, but this is the world of Pokémon. What's the use of giving me a 'sacred plan'!?" Forget it, it doesn't matter whether there is a system or not. Link is determined to do as the Romans do, and try to get his own beginner elf to embark on a journey of collecting badges. But before that, he first had to find a way to escape safely from the cruise ship hijacked by the Marine Corps. But he soon discovered that his system could actually simulate the future of another world to obtain rewards. "Although I aspire to be a trainer, it's not a bad idea to be a part-time trainer!" Note: Pure PM, no Digimon.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(17)Scraped 19d ago
How should I put it? This book is a bit too gamified. For people who like to watch Pokémon anime but rarely play Pokémon games, it is a bit too abstract and too gamified. To put it simply, it is not realistic enough. In fact, when the book was finished, a sentence suddenly appeared that said that all of this was the protagonist's dream before his death. I would not be surprised at all, because what you wrote is really too fantasy, but for people who are not familiar with Pokémon games, the reading threshold is too high.
Chi Ye, strong!
At the age of 11, Chihong cleared the Eighth Avenue Gym in one year and helped Green Green achieve the fastest championship. In the same year, he also went to the Chengdu area to completely defeat the Rockets and their boss Itaki and Mewtwo and conquered Mewtwo. At the age of 12, he defeated the four kings Shiba in a duel. At the age of 14, he became the gym leader of the Tokiwaban Gym. At the age of 16, he led Mewtwo to defeat the Rockets' boss Itaki and Kadeoxys in a duel.
It's messy. The more I write, the less I know what I'm writing. It's hard to have the desire to read on. It really makes me feel like I might cut it off at any time.
I have no feelings for Pokémon, I just want to watch Digimon, because I have only watched Digimon, not Pokémon, and I have grown up when I can.
Playing with Desperate Situation Survival, well received
This is the first time I've seen an article about survival in a desperate situation.
The writing is very messy. I feel like I write whatever comes to mind. There is no main line or goal.
It seems that there are no idiots, and it is a relatively happy elf novel. I recommend
The Pokémon stories are pretty good, but will there be a female protagonist in the follow-up? It is recommended not to write it, it may collapse easily.
The whole Milerton, who dared not fight, was used as a vehicle.
The author writes novels very casually. It seems that the novel is only written for people who are very familiar with Pokémon and other things. People who have not learned about it in detail can't read this novel at all. It gives people the feeling of a hammer here and a rake here and there.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(17)Scraped 19d ago
How should I put it? This book is a bit too gamified. For people who like to watch Pokémon anime but rarely play Pokémon games, it is a bit too abstract and too gamified. To put it simply, it is not realistic enough. In fact, when the book was finished, a sentence suddenly appeared that said that all of this was the protagonist's dream before his death. I would not be surprised at all, because what you wrote is really too fantasy, but for people who are not familiar with Pokémon games, the reading threshold is too high.
Chi Ye, strong!
At the age of 11, Chihong cleared the Eighth Avenue Gym in one year and helped Green Green achieve the fastest championship. In the same year, he also went to the Chengdu area to completely defeat the Rockets and their boss Itaki and Mewtwo and conquered Mewtwo. At the age of 12, he defeated the four kings Shiba in a duel. At the age of 14, he became the gym leader of the Tokiwaban Gym. At the age of 16, he led Mewtwo to defeat the Rockets' boss Itaki and Kadeoxys in a duel.
It's messy. The more I write, the less I know what I'm writing. It's hard to have the desire to read on. It really makes me feel like I might cut it off at any time.
I have no feelings for Pokémon, I just want to watch Digimon, because I have only watched Digimon, not Pokémon, and I have grown up when I can.
Playing with Desperate Situation Survival, well received
This is the first time I've seen an article about survival in a desperate situation.
The writing is very messy. I feel like I write whatever comes to mind. There is no main line or goal.
It seems that there are no idiots, and it is a relatively happy elf novel. I recommend
The Pokémon stories are pretty good, but will there be a female protagonist in the follow-up? It is recommended not to write it, it may collapse easily.
The whole Milerton, who dared not fight, was used as a vehicle.
The author writes novels very casually. It seems that the novel is only written for people who are very familiar with Pokémon and other things. People who have not learned about it in detail can't read this novel at all. It gives people the feeling of a hammer here and a rake here and there.
Featured in 3 Booklists
Official(3)
[Recommendation: 75] [Category: Elf Literature] The protagonist Link accidentally traveled to the Hoenn region of the Pokémon world, but was bound to a "Holy Plan" system that should have belonged to the digital world. The plot revolves around his attempt to get rid of the system disorder: while he collects badges and cultivates elves (such as fire foxes, water wave dolphins, etc.) As a traditional trainer, he also uses the system's ability to simulate the future of a different world to obtain rewards, and even challenges super-powerful enemies such as the axe-splitting mantis through the dream world's "Dream Sky Continuous Battle". The story combines classic Pokémon elements with cross-dimensional system settings. It not only has the main storyline of escaping from the ocean team to hijack a cruise ship and challenge the gym, but also intersperses a unique growth path that exploits system loopholes (such as simulation rewards and dream props to bring back to reality), showing the dual adventures of the protagonist as a "part-time trainer" in the Pokémon world.



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I suggest you wait and see this book first. I didn't expect that his last elf novel was so unfinished. Moreover, the author often writes two or more books. Although the writing is quite interesting, when the author's ideas come up, he writes them first. If he loses his ideas, he may end up unfinished. Make your own decision.













