
Mysterious First Empire
by Thrush
About This Novel
Welcome to Paris, the best city in continental Europe. One hundred years after Napoleon's victory at Waterloo, this place has become the center of the world. But my friend, the real ruler here has never been the corpse emperor who has been lying in the Tuileries Palace for a century, but the mysterious gods whispering behind the throne: occultism, spirituality, alchemy, esotericism, occult societies... The mysterious gods are encroaching on this world unscrupulously, trying to make this city a hotbed for their incarnation. You still have hope to change everything, a stranger from another world, but no matter how ambitious the goal is, it needs to be accomplished step by step - how about we start our great career by establishing a good relationship with the princesses around us?
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What Readers Think
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Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 2mo ago
In the past few days, I have seen several book friends reporting on the issue of plot rhythm. The author first started writing Japanese-style light novels, and his understanding of the rhythm of online writing may indeed be insufficient. I apologize to everyone. The author received similar feedback in the early stages of creation, and also tried to add more daily parts between events. However, much of the early content of this book relies on depositing manuscripts, and the author has to go to work every day, so he is basically unable to make drastic changes to the content and rhythm of the first volume. Therefore, the changes in rhythm will basically be gradually reflected after the second volume. However, among the several book friends who have reported the writing rhythm problem in recent days, only one has announced the current reading progress (late period of the first volume). If you have read the contents of the second volume and beyond, I hope you can give me feedback as to whether there are still similar problems in the subsequent contents, as a reference and benchmark for future creations. Thanks again to all book friends who are willing to provide comments.
I didn't understand Chapter 3. The protagonist could have been killed in one go. I thought the transcendent didn't want to kill the protagonist. The protagonist ran away and the transcendent wanted to kill the protagonist again. Forcibly giving the protagonist an aura of immortality was too rough.
Too many pitfalls
The author dug a lot of pits in his writing, and every thought came out one by one. After digging, we had to fill in, and after filling, we had to dig, and a lot was dug. I know, for the sake of follow-up, but digging too much is actually pointless.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 2mo ago
In the past few days, I have seen several book friends reporting on the issue of plot rhythm. The author first started writing Japanese-style light novels, and his understanding of the rhythm of online writing may indeed be insufficient. I apologize to everyone. The author received similar feedback in the early stages of creation, and also tried to add more daily parts between events. However, much of the early content of this book relies on depositing manuscripts, and the author has to go to work every day, so he is basically unable to make drastic changes to the content and rhythm of the first volume. Therefore, the changes in rhythm will basically be gradually reflected after the second volume. However, among the several book friends who have reported the writing rhythm problem in recent days, only one has announced the current reading progress (late period of the first volume). If you have read the contents of the second volume and beyond, I hope you can give me feedback as to whether there are still similar problems in the subsequent contents, as a reference and benchmark for future creations. Thanks again to all book friends who are willing to provide comments.
I didn't understand Chapter 3. The protagonist could have been killed in one go. I thought the transcendent didn't want to kill the protagonist. The protagonist ran away and the transcendent wanted to kill the protagonist again. Forcibly giving the protagonist an aura of immortality was too rough.
Too many pitfalls
The author dug a lot of pits in his writing, and every thought came out one by one. After digging, we had to fill in, and after filling, we had to dig, and a lot was dug. I know, for the sake of follow-up, but digging too much is actually pointless.









