
Abstraction is Prohibited in My Mc Dungeon!
About This Novel
"This princess has a bold idea!" "Please tell me." "Elves are natural beings born from the ancient elf trees, and the monsters in MC dungeons are also natural beings." "If we use the principle of monster spawning towers and build a large number of elf spawning towers around the ancient elf trees, will it contribute to the exponential growth of the elf population?" "..." ---- Su Lin, who traveled to the continent of Eslam, vowed to build his MC world into the world's best dungeon and become the strongest Steve in history. First things first... Just let these damn abstract natives stop messing around in his MC dungeon! "With some soul sand, some wither skulls, and command blocks, you can summon wither... It's broken! It's wither storm!" "Damn it! Don't do sex work in my MC dungeon!!!"
What Readers Think
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Official(16)Scraped 3d ago
The subject matter is very good and the author's writing style is also very good. In the dungeon theme, it can be considered a very good novel. After reading dozens of chapters (currently updated to chapter 35), I always feel that the protagonist is gradually turning into a tool. On the surface, the protagonist is the boss and the master of the dungeon, and the elves are the workers, but there is always a feeling that the elves are the boss. People often talk about the resources in the dungeon, as if these resources belong to the elves, but in fact the resources belong to the protagonist, and the protagonist has given them the permission to mine, so the materials produced in the dungeon belong to the elves. There is also the tendency to make plans and implement them on their own without consulting or consenting to the protagonist. For example, in Chapter 21, they planned to move the ancient elf tree to the dungeon. They didn't even mention discussing it with the protagonist. They just acted like they were planning to move here and make the dungeon their home, which was a bit speechless. Another example is Chapter 25, which talks about using the resources of the dungeon to draw the enemy over, as if the resources of the dungeon belong to them, even if the materials produced by the dungeon are better than resources. Also, the protagonist clearly emphasized over and over again that terrorists should not be brought into the dungeon, but the elves were like having donkey hair in their ears. They didn't listen to a word, they just made a plan and then implemented it. When the protagonist asked, they just said "Sorry, the plan has already started. They should have been attracted by the resources of the MC dungeon..." And that was it. I was really speechless. Whose dungeon is this? To be honest, in this kind of dungeon novel, you can be a mastermind, just like the dungeon novel. At most, you can prepare some novice gift packs and introduce the basic rules to them. When they kill some people, they will naturally follow your rules; Or you can be a leader, but you need to be strong enough, tough enough, and ruthless enough. Demonstration is not enough. What you need is actual combat. When necessary, you can beat up the elders of the elves to let them know that your strength is not just for viewing. If you really piss them off, it is easy to wipe out the entire clan. In this way, they will put themselves in the position of collaborators and follow your rules. If they have any matters or plans, they will ask you for instructions and discuss them with you first, instead of being treated like a holy mother's heart, a big fool, or just a roadside person. There are no rules. Now the dungeon is occupied by pigeons and is about to become an elven dungeon.
Everything else is fine, except that the protagonist has a good temper. Even if he doesn't care about the elf taking over, he still needs to show his attitude.
I suggest the author talk about the benefits of the protagonist helping the elves, otherwise this will be the same mindless and cool novel as the previous one and will lose a lot of newcomers.
It turns out this is your book. I never noticed it before. No wonder the style looks like
Author, do you plan to write another book?
I don't know what the real world is for, nor what other dungeons are for.
The protagonist chooses the elves as an agent in the real world and helps the elves drive out the invaders... And then what? From the current point of view, the iron puppets can defeat the main forces of other forces head-on, not to mention the refining of medicine, elytra, etc. Later. So I just want to ask, what about the real-world plot later? No, the outline of this book is really that the protagonist made 32767 mods and created 32767 MC worlds, which is a great achievement. Other forces in the real world couldn't sit still. The protagonist felt that reality was too troublesome, so he spent 5 words to shut down the real world. The whole book is finished. What about other dungeons? In this book, I don't know if there are items from other dungeons that cannot be brought into different dungeon settings, but in terms of world view, the output of dungeons is also a very important source of resources and can generally be brought into other dungeons. What about the protagonist's impact on other dungeons? What impact do other dungeon items have on the protagonist?
Does the author of this account still want it?
When can this book be updated?
That idiot elf makes people uncomfortable to watch.
Author, I haven't read it for a few months, so why did you end it immediately?
It was so well written, but ended up being unfinished.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(16)Scraped 3d ago
The subject matter is very good and the author's writing style is also very good. In the dungeon theme, it can be considered a very good novel. After reading dozens of chapters (currently updated to chapter 35), I always feel that the protagonist is gradually turning into a tool. On the surface, the protagonist is the boss and the master of the dungeon, and the elves are the workers, but there is always a feeling that the elves are the boss. People often talk about the resources in the dungeon, as if these resources belong to the elves, but in fact the resources belong to the protagonist, and the protagonist has given them the permission to mine, so the materials produced in the dungeon belong to the elves. There is also the tendency to make plans and implement them on their own without consulting or consenting to the protagonist. For example, in Chapter 21, they planned to move the ancient elf tree to the dungeon. They didn't even mention discussing it with the protagonist. They just acted like they were planning to move here and make the dungeon their home, which was a bit speechless. Another example is Chapter 25, which talks about using the resources of the dungeon to draw the enemy over, as if the resources of the dungeon belong to them, even if the materials produced by the dungeon are better than resources. Also, the protagonist clearly emphasized over and over again that terrorists should not be brought into the dungeon, but the elves were like having donkey hair in their ears. They didn't listen to a word, they just made a plan and then implemented it. When the protagonist asked, they just said "Sorry, the plan has already started. They should have been attracted by the resources of the MC dungeon..." And that was it. I was really speechless. Whose dungeon is this? To be honest, in this kind of dungeon novel, you can be a mastermind, just like the dungeon novel. At most, you can prepare some novice gift packs and introduce the basic rules to them. When they kill some people, they will naturally follow your rules; Or you can be a leader, but you need to be strong enough, tough enough, and ruthless enough. Demonstration is not enough. What you need is actual combat. When necessary, you can beat up the elders of the elves to let them know that your strength is not just for viewing. If you really piss them off, it is easy to wipe out the entire clan. In this way, they will put themselves in the position of collaborators and follow your rules. If they have any matters or plans, they will ask you for instructions and discuss them with you first, instead of being treated like a holy mother's heart, a big fool, or just a roadside person. There are no rules. Now the dungeon is occupied by pigeons and is about to become an elven dungeon.
Everything else is fine, except that the protagonist has a good temper. Even if he doesn't care about the elf taking over, he still needs to show his attitude.
I suggest the author talk about the benefits of the protagonist helping the elves, otherwise this will be the same mindless and cool novel as the previous one and will lose a lot of newcomers.
It turns out this is your book. I never noticed it before. No wonder the style looks like
Author, do you plan to write another book?
I don't know what the real world is for, nor what other dungeons are for.
The protagonist chooses the elves as an agent in the real world and helps the elves drive out the invaders... And then what? From the current point of view, the iron puppets can defeat the main forces of other forces head-on, not to mention the refining of medicine, elytra, etc. Later. So I just want to ask, what about the real-world plot later? No, the outline of this book is really that the protagonist made 32767 mods and created 32767 MC worlds, which is a great achievement. Other forces in the real world couldn't sit still. The protagonist felt that reality was too troublesome, so he spent 5 words to shut down the real world. The whole book is finished. What about other dungeons? In this book, I don't know if there are items from other dungeons that cannot be brought into different dungeon settings, but in terms of world view, the output of dungeons is also a very important source of resources and can generally be brought into other dungeons. What about the protagonist's impact on other dungeons? What impact do other dungeon items have on the protagonist?
Does the author of this account still want it?
When can this book be updated?
That idiot elf makes people uncomfortable to watch.
Author, I haven't read it for a few months, so why did you end it immediately?
It was so well written, but ended up being unfinished.













