
Overthrow Qin
About This Novel
In the last years of the Qin Dynasty, the world was exhausted. All the people are filled with sorrow and resentment in the wild, and the survivors of the six kingdoms are vying for Qin. At this moment, a hero rises up and sings for the world. "The world has been suffering from Qin for a long time!" "If you attack the unjust, you will punish Qin!" "Princes, generals, and ministers would rather have the guts!"
What Readers Think
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Community(0)
Official(23)Scraped 21d ago
Tasteless
Although the shadow of the Qin officials was very heavy in the previous book, there were some of my own things in the later part. This book gave me the feeling that it was too fast. The progress bar of the protagonist jumped from zero to 50 in a blink of an eye. The war in the previous book was pretty good. The war in this book was written like a **. Now I have subscribed to two books after seeing it on the shelves. It can only be said that it is tasteless to eat and a pity to throw away. After all, there are too few authors who write about the pre-Qin period. The only two books that I strongly recommend are Qin Li and Picking Up a First Emperor. To be honest, Lao Lang's father is a little worse, but it is only suitable for comparison with the two books above. My father, Henkel, is also one of the best in Western Han Dynasty novels.
The early writing was really good, but Liangbai started to feel a bit unsatisfactory.
I quite like it. It's okay. I really enjoyed watching it twice.
The battle scenes are poorly written and lack description. The logic and history are good, but the battlefield writing is terrible.
It's not as good as the previous ones, it's a bit watery, and some of the plots are a bit tacky.
What a great book. I'm so confused. I spent more than 20 yuan to read part of it. The cost is too high.
It ended too quickly, without writing about the overlord's bravery and Liu Bang's heroic posture. Why not focus on a shocking decisive battle with Liu Bang and Xiang Yu? It's like writing about the Three Kingdoms. You just brushed off Cao Cao and Liu Bei at the beginning. It was a waste of my gold coins.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. DdxccHappy Singles Day to PSP in all periods
Good book, well written, but I've fallen into a trap
Rating
Community(0)
Official(23)Scraped 21d ago
Tasteless
Although the shadow of the Qin officials was very heavy in the previous book, there were some of my own things in the later part. This book gave me the feeling that it was too fast. The progress bar of the protagonist jumped from zero to 50 in a blink of an eye. The war in the previous book was pretty good. The war in this book was written like a **. Now I have subscribed to two books after seeing it on the shelves. It can only be said that it is tasteless to eat and a pity to throw away. After all, there are too few authors who write about the pre-Qin period. The only two books that I strongly recommend are Qin Li and Picking Up a First Emperor. To be honest, Lao Lang's father is a little worse, but it is only suitable for comparison with the two books above. My father, Henkel, is also one of the best in Western Han Dynasty novels.
The early writing was really good, but Liangbai started to feel a bit unsatisfactory.
I quite like it. It's okay. I really enjoyed watching it twice.
The battle scenes are poorly written and lack description. The logic and history are good, but the battlefield writing is terrible.
It's not as good as the previous ones, it's a bit watery, and some of the plots are a bit tacky.
What a great book. I'm so confused. I spent more than 20 yuan to read part of it. The cost is too high.
It ended too quickly, without writing about the overlord's bravery and Liu Bang's heroic posture. Why not focus on a shocking decisive battle with Liu Bang and Xiang Yu? It's like writing about the Three Kingdoms. You just brushed off Cao Cao and Liu Bei at the beginning. It was a waste of my gold coins.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. DdxccHappy Singles Day to PSP in all periods
Good book, well written, but I've fallen into a trap
Featured in 17 Booklists
Official(17)
The protagonist is reborn as Wu Guang in the 37th year of the First Emperor. . .




[80 points·Through the Qin Dynasty] Traveling through Wu Guang and revolting against Qin, from the perspective of future generations, Qin Wei is fighting fast, but the premise is that Chen Sheng and Wu Guang's uprising can be said to be extinguished instantly, and Xiang Liang, the strongest among the princes, was also killed by Zhang Han. If one of Chen Sheng and Wu Guang had survived, or even been in a stalemate, and external pressure had led to the internal unity of Qin, then it would not have taken three years to win Guanzhong. It took Liu Bang 4 years to destroy Chu. It was like the various princes gave away too many interests. Liu Bang was still fighting all the princes until his death. Until the rebellion of the Seven Chess Kings of the Han Dynasty, the centralization of power was not completed. The protagonist is only over 20 years old. Even if he spends more time, slowly handles the various countries, does not leave a mess behind, and then cultivates his health, three generations can fully identify with the new unified empire.




The protagonist is reborn as Wu Guang in Chen Sheng Wu Guangzhong. The writing is interesting, at least there are no too outrageous logical loopholes. Summary: Food and grass.




It is a historical novel about the struggle for hegemony in the late Qin Dynasty. The protagonist travels through time and becomes Wu Guang. I have not yet written about the Dazexiang Uprising. The previous ones are pretty good. It feels like it is not difficult to keep it high-quality. Poetry score: 9.0 Points














