
The Love Show Went Bad, the Female Guests Were Anxious
About This Novel
Lu Ze is a man who has "lie flat" engraved in his bones. His life motto is "hard work may not necessarily lead to success, but if you don't work hard, it will definitely be easy." By chance, he was tricked into a top-notch romance drama called "Heartbeat Code". While the other guests were showing off their acting skills and fighting for love, Lu Ze just wanted to complete the contract, take the money, leave, and take a vacation. He cares more about the ripeness of the steak for dinner than he cares about the glances of the female guests. He studied which deck chair on the island was the most comfortable, ignoring the undercurrent of Shura Field. However, it was this clear stupidity that was completely ruined in the love variety show and just wanted to work, which made him like a mudslide, destroying all the carefully designed scripts. When all the goddesses discovered that their charm was not as good as a plate of barbecued ribs, their desire to win was ignited. ... Lu Ze inexplicably became a hot commodity, and even became popular in an unexpected way.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 1d ago
Another conspiracy or something?
It's so cliche. I'm tired of looking at this. I can't stand it anymore.
A matter of common sense
The plot is okay, but there is a problem with the author's common sense. The author always emphasizes the rules and explains that the letter is written to the opposite sex, but the protagonist always writes to men and no one feels that it violates the rules (including the director). This is the first thing I don't understand. The second one is that the protagonist lost the game and only cooked three dishes. Nine people were still full (the director made up the count). Four adults and four children in my family needed eight dishes (I was the only adult male). Nine adults only had three dishes? (This can barely be explained as the protagonist cooks a whole pot of each dish and serves it in a large bowl or basin)
worth a look
The writing is delicate and thought-provoking. There is no bad street plot.
I can't stand it anymore, it's just so fake and a lot of words that I think are beautiful.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 1d ago
Another conspiracy or something?
It's so cliche. I'm tired of looking at this. I can't stand it anymore.
A matter of common sense
The plot is okay, but there is a problem with the author's common sense. The author always emphasizes the rules and explains that the letter is written to the opposite sex, but the protagonist always writes to men and no one feels that it violates the rules (including the director). This is the first thing I don't understand. The second one is that the protagonist lost the game and only cooked three dishes. Nine people were still full (the director made up the count). Four adults and four children in my family needed eight dishes (I was the only adult male). Nine adults only had three dishes? (This can barely be explained as the protagonist cooks a whole pot of each dish and serves it in a large bowl or basin)
worth a look
The writing is delicate and thought-provoking. There is no bad street plot.
I can't stand it anymore, it's just so fake and a lot of words that I think are beautiful.









