
Lol Superstar
by Midnight Homeless People Working In The Dark
About This Novel
Jun Le, who was reborn in S7, joined ig as he wished and became a substitute support. What? To compete with Baolan for the starting spot, isn't it just a matter of having the right skills? The partner is not Jack but West? Don't care at all! Whether it is brain-based assistance or operational assistance, Junle has it all! Being a professional player is just the beginning, his goal is to become the most dazzling superstar on the field!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 26d ago
How should I put it? It is a rare good article in the recent e-sports books. The advantage is that many LoL articles recently have the feeling that the protagonist leads the four pits with one god. He carries the game by himself and does not see the importance of teammates at all. This book describes the importance of the team quite well. However, I personally feel that there are still some shortcomings, such as the role of the protagonist is too small, there are no outstanding operations, and there is no sense of presence. It is just what skills the protagonist has handed in, died, kept AD, and replaced them. The detailed operations of the protagonist are rarely described, such as Thresh E to break the prince's EQ, blind monk's second Q, Blum Flash WE to block fatal blows for teammates, and the auxiliary position may not have many opportunities to stand out, but it is definitely not less. Sometimes it is quite refreshing to watch the extreme protection of teammates. The 1V2 counter-kill under Thresh Tower is probably the only eye-catching operation so far. When the game starts, the player is basically invisible. I think the importance of some protagonists can be appropriately increased, and the protagonist can be given some eye-catching operations, or save the world in a wave. Occasionally once or twice will not affect the perception, but will add a sense of immersion. After all, we are reading a novel, not listening to the game report. Moreover, the description of ig is a bit bland. Although it is said that it has a lot of winning streaks, it does not feel the feeling of crushing, or the battle of wits and courage like a balanced game, and it does not see the miracle team that ig is best at. Although ig did have some stumbles before the 2018 World Championship, in the book it has already won the championship in 2017, and the team that won the championship should not be like this. It is a book with obvious advantages and disadvantages, but now I feel it is a little too bland. I hope the author will work hard! It's your first time writing a book review, so don't be surprised!
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 26d ago
How should I put it? It is a rare good article in the recent e-sports books. The advantage is that many LoL articles recently have the feeling that the protagonist leads the four pits with one god. He carries the game by himself and does not see the importance of teammates at all. This book describes the importance of the team quite well. However, I personally feel that there are still some shortcomings, such as the role of the protagonist is too small, there are no outstanding operations, and there is no sense of presence. It is just what skills the protagonist has handed in, died, kept AD, and replaced them. The detailed operations of the protagonist are rarely described, such as Thresh E to break the prince's EQ, blind monk's second Q, Blum Flash WE to block fatal blows for teammates, and the auxiliary position may not have many opportunities to stand out, but it is definitely not less. Sometimes it is quite refreshing to watch the extreme protection of teammates. The 1V2 counter-kill under Thresh Tower is probably the only eye-catching operation so far. When the game starts, the player is basically invisible. I think the importance of some protagonists can be appropriately increased, and the protagonist can be given some eye-catching operations, or save the world in a wave. Occasionally once or twice will not affect the perception, but will add a sense of immersion. After all, we are reading a novel, not listening to the game report. Moreover, the description of ig is a bit bland. Although it is said that it has a lot of winning streaks, it does not feel the feeling of crushing, or the battle of wits and courage like a balanced game, and it does not see the miracle team that ig is best at. Although ig did have some stumbles before the 2018 World Championship, in the book it has already won the championship in 2017, and the team that won the championship should not be like this. It is a book with obvious advantages and disadvantages, but now I feel it is a little too bland. I hope the author will work hard! It's your first time writing a book review, so don't be surprised!









