
From Lemure to King of Hell
About This Novel
Non-dndNon-stereotype devil After traveling through two times, after traveling to hell for the second time, he became the lowest existence among them - the little evil devil. Facing this really hellish situation De Luo looked around, looking at the boundless enemies. He called up the dot panel, showed a peaceful and happy smile, took out his long ax and said: "Thank you for the gift of nature!" So, holding a sharp ax and starting from the little lemure, he began his murderous conquest in hell... -------------------- Much later. Having reached the top of Hell and been crowned king, Derro sat on the throne, surrounded by a mountain of corpses and a sea of blood, his gaze penetrated the plane and reached somewhere in the mortal world. "The next one is you!"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 9d ago
The decline in the devil's IQ is too serious. As soon as you level up, you will write all the devils below as idiots. Then there is a very serious point of criticism. When the protagonist was at the garrison, his top officer was so old, and he still didn't know the factions among the devils. Can you please explain it?
I always feel that the author used to write fantasy, and the demon clan in the book is more like a super-large physical training sect that integrates the state and the clan.
Use the writing method of fantasy fairy tales and other novels to write the devil of Western fantasy, and you will be neither fish nor fowl.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 9d ago
The decline in the devil's IQ is too serious. As soon as you level up, you will write all the devils below as idiots. Then there is a very serious point of criticism. When the protagonist was at the garrison, his top officer was so old, and he still didn't know the factions among the devils. Can you please explain it?
I always feel that the author used to write fantasy, and the demon clan in the book is more like a super-large physical training sect that integrates the state and the clan.
Use the writing method of fantasy fairy tales and other novels to write the devil of Western fantasy, and you will be neither fish nor fowl.









