
Change Your Job as a Pig Farmer and Start Martial Arts to Become a God!
About This Novel
Lin An was born into the Yong Dynasty, which was founded by military force. For more than 200 years, the country was full of factions and factions, and natural and man-made disasters continued among the people. In order to find a place to settle down in the coming troubled times. Lin Anzai tried martial arts, but found that his martial arts talent was unsatisfactory, so he could only choose to study and become an official. Unexpectedly, he had been studying hard for twenty years, but because he accepted a great scholar as his teacher, he was involved in a party struggle. He failed to enter the capital examination room and was deprived of his qualifications as a scholar for life. Seeing that there is no hope of studying and becoming an official, Lin An is forced to go home and raise pigs. It just so happens that God will not kill him...
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Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
This book is very obviously a "plot article" that has been delayed by a "panel upgrade article", and the two do not go well together. If the author has strong writing skills, they can naturally be used together to attract both reader groups. But the problem is that if the author's writing power is not enough, readers who were attracted by the "panel upgrade article" in the early stage will abandon the book in large numbers when the author writes the plot wildly and ignores the "panel upgrade". Readers who like "plots" will most likely abandon the book when they see the "panel upgrade" at the beginning. The end result is that you fail to capture both types of readers. When writing a web article, if you focus on "panel upgrade" at the beginning, then you must focus on "panel upgrade" later on, and the plot advancement must focus on the "panel upgrade" service as much as possible, so that readers can stick to it. On the other hand, if you want to write a novel that focuses on "plot", you must downplay the "panel upgrade" at the beginning, or let the readers feel that the protagonist's "upgrade plug-in" is just a small auxiliary at the beginning of the chapter, so as to attract readers who don't like the "upgrade flow". The author's book focused on raising pigs, taming animals, and upgrading them at the beginning. After the protagonist suddenly practiced martial arts, the author really started to dump the plot and almost didn't mention the panel upgrade. Later, the protagonist was actually arranged to travel down the mountain. The reason was that the protagonist wanted to find his own "road." It is estimated that at least 80% of the readers who are attracted by the beast taming upgrade will abandon the book. In other words, does the author himself know what he wants to write?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 1mo ago
This book is very obviously a "plot article" that has been delayed by a "panel upgrade article", and the two do not go well together. If the author has strong writing skills, they can naturally be used together to attract both reader groups. But the problem is that if the author's writing power is not enough, readers who were attracted by the "panel upgrade article" in the early stage will abandon the book in large numbers when the author writes the plot wildly and ignores the "panel upgrade". Readers who like "plots" will most likely abandon the book when they see the "panel upgrade" at the beginning. The end result is that you fail to capture both types of readers. When writing a web article, if you focus on "panel upgrade" at the beginning, then you must focus on "panel upgrade" later on, and the plot advancement must focus on the "panel upgrade" service as much as possible, so that readers can stick to it. On the other hand, if you want to write a novel that focuses on "plot", you must downplay the "panel upgrade" at the beginning, or let the readers feel that the protagonist's "upgrade plug-in" is just a small auxiliary at the beginning of the chapter, so as to attract readers who don't like the "upgrade flow". The author's book focused on raising pigs, taming animals, and upgrading them at the beginning. After the protagonist suddenly practiced martial arts, the author really started to dump the plot and almost didn't mention the panel upgrade. Later, the protagonist was actually arranged to travel down the mountain. The reason was that the protagonist wanted to find his own "road." It is estimated that at least 80% of the readers who are attracted by the beast taming upgrade will abandon the book. In other words, does the author himself know what he wants to write?









