
I'm the Dauphin in France
About This Novel
The completed novel "Lady, Please Stop", you are welcome to come and read it! High-end 16000+ [A cool article about fictional history, trying to fit the original time and space as much as possible] He was in France, had just entered Versailles, and was the crown prince. The only problem is that my father is Louis XVI, and he will be killed in a few years... Since my father and ministers are unreliable, I have no choice but to take matters into my own hands to rectify France! Let's make a little money first and solve the financial crisis that has plagued the country for hundreds of years. Then give those nobles with evil intentions and plans to seize power a hard beating. Then they seized the church that occupied a large amount of land and gained it for nothing. Industry, technology, agriculture, and commerce go hand in hand. I am the greatest crown prince in France! That year, Xiao Yingzi was entangled in the alliance army's pressure on the border, so I directly took his island. That year, I pointed my sword at the whole of Europe. I will accomplish the feats that the emperor failed to accomplish back then!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(54)Scraped 2d ago
French style in the 1920s
I recommended this book once, but it might be too serious, but no one read it. So I might as well post some pictures of French beauties in the 1920s. It's much easier than the Great Revolution, Constitutional Monarchy, and the Anti-French Alliance's dynastic hegemony.
Can you stop fighting the old Europe? You don't expand your territory. Everyone wants to see you expand your colonies. Why are there so few people reading your book? The European part is too long-winded. You didn't expand the colonies during the Napoleonic period at all.
The protagonist is not a king, and the buttocks are wiped more and more. When are you going to go up? How can you play with the Adou couple who can't help them?
A very rigorous book
The author has rich historical knowledge and the starting point of the story is good, but you have ruined the history. The protagonist is trying his best to avoid the French Revolution, hoping that he might succeed in the end. It is not to delay time but to finally smooth out the revolutionary impulse of the French people and use foreign war to divert internal conflicts. But has the author ever thought that the French Revolution's position in world history cannot be replaced by any other revolution, and the storming of the Bastille is a symbolic symbol of all revolutionary movements. If this revolution is erased, what will happen to the February Revolution in Europe in the future? What to do about the Paris Commune uprising? What to do about the October Revolution? What to do in China in 1949? Author, please complete this revolution no matter what, even if it is a revolution led by the crown prince himself. Overthrow the feudal forces and the church, establish a constitutional monarch and compile a civil code, defeat several anti-French alliances, and let the fire of the revolution be passed on. Please.
He won't wait until the end to ascend the throne, keep writing about the two female supporting characters and when will the heroine come out? It makes people uncomfortable to watch.
What happened later?
It's a very good book. Basically every time I read twenty or thirty chapters, I read it immediately and have been reading it until now. As a result, the protagonist seemed to be offline after returning from North Africa in Chapter 226. They obviously sent someone to investigate, but they just brushed it off. After three days, they found out something. They didn't do anything in these three days. It was only when someone stumbled into the Duke's house that they found out that the matter was serious. It is true that we see a lot of things from God's perspective, but the protagonist is clearly a time traveler and is familiar with this history. He clearly knows that the Duke of Orleans is the biggest enemy within the royal family, but he does not conduct very clear surveillance. Not to mention who the Duke meets and talks about, we don't even know where the Duke goes out. The Duke also knows to let his subordinates bribe local gangsters to act as informants. You, a crown prince, are just focusing on developing the army. If you just read these chapters, it feels like the protagonist's political IQ has dropped off. Please, their goals are different from yours. What the protagonist wants is to prosper France and take over directly when the time comes. The Duke wants France as long as it is rotten. He will do whatever it takes to bring down the royal family, even if he takes the initiative to start a revolution. As long as his chance is greater than the protagonist, he will do it. Where is the protagonist? He only cares about the superstructure but doesn't care about the nobles at all. He doesn't know the constraints every time he does this or that. Sometimes he even knows the reasons but doesn't do it. Every time he describes this, he only wins over two or three nobles. From the beginning to the end, the political power possessed by the protagonist seems to be very great. In fact, even the queen does not dare to completely ignore the opinions of the nobles. If he hadn't set up a police academy and gathered two legions with more than 10,000 people in his hands, he would really be like a little white dove in the eyes of others. I have also been reading from the beginning to the present. The logic of these recently updated chapters seems to be particularly poor. It feels as if the IQ is forcibly lowered in order to kill the Duke of Orleans and then the protagonist directly clears the IQ. We clearly know that there is a great revolution, we clearly know that there is a food crisis, we clearly know that our granary is not full, we clearly know that someone is going to cause trouble, and even a big city has completely fallen for several days without any means of countermeasures. This feeling like historical revision is really painful to watch.
Although this book is not widely collected, it is surprisingly well written.
In my opinion, the quality of this book should be collected by more people. It may be due to the genre, or it may be because the rhythm at the beginning is relatively slow. After the early foreshadowing, it feels better and better, and the foreshadowing of the emotional line is also good. If you don't have many books to read, you can read this one. It is not a high-quality book, but it can still be called excellent. I recommend that people who are in a book shortage should read it, it will be much better after the preliminary foreshadowing.
This book truly restores various classes in France in the 18th century
Explode harder. Explode harder. Explode harder. It's too little.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(54)Scraped 2d ago
French style in the 1920s
I recommended this book once, but it might be too serious, but no one read it. So I might as well post some pictures of French beauties in the 1920s. It's much easier than the Great Revolution, Constitutional Monarchy, and the Anti-French Alliance's dynastic hegemony.
Can you stop fighting the old Europe? You don't expand your territory. Everyone wants to see you expand your colonies. Why are there so few people reading your book? The European part is too long-winded. You didn't expand the colonies during the Napoleonic period at all.
The protagonist is not a king, and the buttocks are wiped more and more. When are you going to go up? How can you play with the Adou couple who can't help them?
A very rigorous book
The author has rich historical knowledge and the starting point of the story is good, but you have ruined the history. The protagonist is trying his best to avoid the French Revolution, hoping that he might succeed in the end. It is not to delay time but to finally smooth out the revolutionary impulse of the French people and use foreign war to divert internal conflicts. But has the author ever thought that the French Revolution's position in world history cannot be replaced by any other revolution, and the storming of the Bastille is a symbolic symbol of all revolutionary movements. If this revolution is erased, what will happen to the February Revolution in Europe in the future? What to do about the Paris Commune uprising? What to do about the October Revolution? What to do in China in 1949? Author, please complete this revolution no matter what, even if it is a revolution led by the crown prince himself. Overthrow the feudal forces and the church, establish a constitutional monarch and compile a civil code, defeat several anti-French alliances, and let the fire of the revolution be passed on. Please.
He won't wait until the end to ascend the throne, keep writing about the two female supporting characters and when will the heroine come out? It makes people uncomfortable to watch.
What happened later?
It's a very good book. Basically every time I read twenty or thirty chapters, I read it immediately and have been reading it until now. As a result, the protagonist seemed to be offline after returning from North Africa in Chapter 226. They obviously sent someone to investigate, but they just brushed it off. After three days, they found out something. They didn't do anything in these three days. It was only when someone stumbled into the Duke's house that they found out that the matter was serious. It is true that we see a lot of things from God's perspective, but the protagonist is clearly a time traveler and is familiar with this history. He clearly knows that the Duke of Orleans is the biggest enemy within the royal family, but he does not conduct very clear surveillance. Not to mention who the Duke meets and talks about, we don't even know where the Duke goes out. The Duke also knows to let his subordinates bribe local gangsters to act as informants. You, a crown prince, are just focusing on developing the army. If you just read these chapters, it feels like the protagonist's political IQ has dropped off. Please, their goals are different from yours. What the protagonist wants is to prosper France and take over directly when the time comes. The Duke wants France as long as it is rotten. He will do whatever it takes to bring down the royal family, even if he takes the initiative to start a revolution. As long as his chance is greater than the protagonist, he will do it. Where is the protagonist? He only cares about the superstructure but doesn't care about the nobles at all. He doesn't know the constraints every time he does this or that. Sometimes he even knows the reasons but doesn't do it. Every time he describes this, he only wins over two or three nobles. From the beginning to the end, the political power possessed by the protagonist seems to be very great. In fact, even the queen does not dare to completely ignore the opinions of the nobles. If he hadn't set up a police academy and gathered two legions with more than 10,000 people in his hands, he would really be like a little white dove in the eyes of others. I have also been reading from the beginning to the present. The logic of these recently updated chapters seems to be particularly poor. It feels as if the IQ is forcibly lowered in order to kill the Duke of Orleans and then the protagonist directly clears the IQ. We clearly know that there is a great revolution, we clearly know that there is a food crisis, we clearly know that our granary is not full, we clearly know that someone is going to cause trouble, and even a big city has completely fallen for several days without any means of countermeasures. This feeling like historical revision is really painful to watch.
Although this book is not widely collected, it is surprisingly well written.
In my opinion, the quality of this book should be collected by more people. It may be due to the genre, or it may be because the rhythm at the beginning is relatively slow. After the early foreshadowing, it feels better and better, and the foreshadowing of the emotional line is also good. If you don't have many books to read, you can read this one. It is not a high-quality book, but it can still be called excellent. I recommend that people who are in a book shortage should read it, it will be much better after the preliminary foreshadowing.
This book truly restores various classes in France in the 18th century
Explode harder. Explode harder. Explode harder. It's too little.
Featured in 14 Booklists
Community(1)
Official(13)
Recommended: 🌟🌟🌟★ It is said that there is a single heroine, a Russian Duke, and multiple female supporting characters who like the protagonist. As far as the plot is concerned, traveling through time and becoming the Crown Prince Louis XVI changes the plot of the original historical line and develops France. Overall, the writing is very enjoyable. Some operations may not be that feasible, but as a novel, overall IQ is online and it doesn't fool the readers that much. Ps: The protagonist's bottom line is very high, and he doesn't engage in betrayal and selling farm tools. By the way, the Dharma here is considered Luo? So it is also Jingluo? Similar recommendations: Holy Roman Empire (this one sells agricultural tools)




The old book I ordered a year ago will be picked up on September 4, 2025~ ---------- Recommended index ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ The beginning of this book is very interesting. The protagonist is a smart academic who travels to the year before the French Grand Prix and becomes the son of Louis XVI who had his head clicked. He was 13 years old at the time. It can be said to be a hellish start. He likes low-level characters or settings that are full of dangers at the beginning. I am full of expectations.




Plot: ❤️❤️❤️🖤🖤 Character: ❤️❤️❤️🖤🖤 In fact, the subject of the Legal Revolution has been seen a lot so far, but this is the first time I have seen a break from the perspective of a feudal leader. This kind of writing might have been washed away in the past few years when there were more people in An, but it has been okay in recent years. To be honest, this book is not outstanding in the context of many gems, but the author can at least create suspense. It makes people want to see how the author will write about France after the restoration of the monarchy. However, part of the plot I saw is basically a customized plot of the mentally retarded villain deliberately causing harm → the male protagonist is wise and brave to resolve the crisis. The writing of the characters is also very simple. To be honest, if he really followed the author's logic to travel to the past, he would probably have a burp.




I'll put this one first and give it a tentative rating of 3.5. Not bad, but it feels a little short of 4 stars.

















