
I Really Don't Want to Become the Richest Man
by Waiting For The Rain In The Republic Of China
About This Novel
In the world parallel to the earth, there is a place called the "different world", where everything must be chosen again. ... If I could do it all over again - I really didn't want to become the richest man!
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 16d ago
The beginning is full of ideas for making money
Love it, love it, collect it and learn from it
I finally know why no one watched it
There is no passion at all. There is nothing interesting about building a library. If you fire me, I will fire you. Even if you want to leave, you also have to go out and invest. Is it interesting to have to stay shamelessly? I read novels for comfort rather than tiredness. This novel feels a bit tiring.
No one was there
This book is very good. It has a single heroine. There is no ambiguity. There are no pretense or slap-in-the-face plots.
Neuropathy
Inexplicable, nagging, crazy, maybe
Tell me your feelings
The sense of immersion in the front is okay, but the back is quite interesting, especially when the heroine appears. QQ reading is free, which is still very good.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 16d ago
The beginning is full of ideas for making money
Love it, love it, collect it and learn from it
I finally know why no one watched it
There is no passion at all. There is nothing interesting about building a library. If you fire me, I will fire you. Even if you want to leave, you also have to go out and invest. Is it interesting to have to stay shamelessly? I read novels for comfort rather than tiredness. This novel feels a bit tiring.
No one was there
This book is very good. It has a single heroine. There is no ambiguity. There are no pretense or slap-in-the-face plots.
Neuropathy
Inexplicable, nagging, crazy, maybe
Tell me your feelings
The sense of immersion in the front is okay, but the back is quite interesting, especially when the heroine appears. QQ reading is free, which is still very good.









