The plot of this volume comes to an end here, and a new volume will begin next, which is also the last volume of the book.

At that time, all the stories will have an ending, and the male and female protagonists will also have an ending.

Let me briefly report the results first.

I got the Ten Thousand Orders badge this month, which is considered to be the best among Douluo fandoms. I am very grateful to all the readers for your recognition and tolerance as a third-rate writer.

To be honest, my writing in the third volume was not very good, and there were many problems in controlling the rhythm of the plot.

The simulation part was okay, and basically went according to the originally expected direction, including the final finishing part, which I am personally satisfied with.

The problem lies in the actual plot.

Originally, I didn’t want to write about Xiaoxue, the first heroine who really had an intimate relationship with the protagonist.

However, due to various reasons, there were some deviations in my control of the details of the plot. The characterization of some characters also lacked strength in the early stage, which led to this result.

If this were not the case, I would not need to spend so much pen and ink later to make up for it, making certain plots appear complicated and redundant.

The fundamental reason is that the details are not filled in enough. It could have been written more smoothly and smoothly. I will pay attention to it in the future.

As for the second half of this volume, I was actually more exhausted than the first two volumes.

In order to fill in the characters, there are too many emotional lines, which take up other interspersed contradictions and conflicts, including the Killing City part, the Tiandou City part, etc.

This is a pity. Originally, the plot could be richer and give everyone a better reading experience.

Of course there are places where you are satisfied.

It’s mainly the heroine who portrays this part.

Qian Renxue's previous portrayals are almost complete, and in this volume, Zhu Zhuqing's character image has also been enriched a lot.

The most important thing is that Bibi Dong's overall character image is relatively full.

From the simulation at the beginning, to the change in mentality after waking up from the dream, the change in attitude towards Su Cheng and those women, to the complete personality of walking out of hell.

I am personally quite satisfied with the entire change process.

I never envisioned her as a broad-minded woman.

Everything she did was a forced compromise in order to get a certain relationship.

Her positioning of Zhu Zhuqing is actually part of her own voice.

I see that some readers commented in this chapter that she is "Snow White's evil stepmother", which is indeed similar.

This kind of character is actually quite interesting as a heroine, isn't it?

Finally, there is the issue of the mentality of the heroines.

Although Zhu Zhuqing was resentful, she could accept it. Coming late was only one aspect. The most important thing was the influence of her birth environment.

As for Bibi Dong, the title of the first chapter after leaving the simulation is "Unworthy", which is actually her mentality.

Ah Yin has a weak character, simple mind, and is easy to control.

Only Qian Renxue obviously cannot accept this situation at the moment, so she will choose to leave temporarily.

If this were not the case, Bibi Dong would not be able to force her away no matter how hard she planned.

The relationship between Qian Renxue and Bibi Dong determines that if these two people are the heroines, I have to think about how to arrange the plot.

Everything is written consistently. I don’t know if readers are satisfied with this setting.

As for the protagonist... well, you can scold him if you want, the scumbag deserves to be scolded!

If you want to open a harem, but you don't have the domineering spirit of Long Aotian to make Baimei surrender, the process will naturally become tortuous.

We must also have the consciousness of being reviled by thousands of people, pierced by sharp swords, and quartered with hatchets.

Su Cheng must have been mentally prepared!

Finally, I would like to solemnly apologize to everyone.

Due to work reasons, I have a lot of things to do at the end of the year here, so I am a little overwhelmed with updates. I apologize for your understanding.

It's not that I'm lazy or anything, after all, no one has money but doesn't make money, right?

It's just that I hope the first book will have a good result, and I don't want it to be a waste of money or a perfunctory one.

I can write about interesting daily life, and I can write about emotional progression, but I cannot write about meaningless running accounts.

Only by writing seriously can I accumulate experience and draw lessons, so that I can continue writing other books in the future.

ps. I don’t have enough experience with this book. I will definitely sort out the outline when I write the next book. The plot was forced to change in the later part of the third volume, which is really frustrating...

The next volume will expand to the world of soul beasts, and then touch on high-level power, which is the pattern of the divine world.

Because there are many contradictions in the original settings, and because of the pitfalls of the "simulator" principle, I will also make appropriate changes to the relevant original plot and settings.

For those of you who haven’t watched the subsequent Douluo films, it won’t affect your viewing. In fact, I haven’t watched much of it either. They were all recently supplemented for the plot of the fourth volume, and there isn’t much related content.

Except for the group of soul beasts headed by the Silver Dragon King, there won't be much else described.

Volume 4 starts tomorrow: The Dragon King’s Counterattack.

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