(No system + single female lead + slice-of-life)
Laudgreen displayed his extraordinary magical talent as soon as he entered Hogwarts.
Potions is easy to learn, but most of the finished products can only be drunk by animals. Snape regarded him as a fool who tarnished the great potions.
Transfiguration can easily turn inanimate objects into living things with their own thoughts, but it is powerless to do the opposite, which greatly puzzled Dumbledore.
In the study of spells, the spells cast by Lord always have some strange effects.
He only had no problems with Potions and Magical Creatures, and the magical creatures even regarded him as a child of nature.
Everyone praised him, saying he would become the next Newt Scamander, but he stuck to his profession.
Laudgreen: Although I am a master of Transfiguration, my spells are incredibly creative, and the magical creatures trust me, I am actually a botanist.
Filial son: "How many steps are there to become a Kage?" Stern father: "Three! First, create a country; second, build a ninja village; and finally, squeeze out one of the five largest ninja villages!" Filial son: "I'd better change my ideal!" Stern father: "You are teachable! My son was born to be a superior person. There is no need to go far to become a ninja. Even the strongest Hokage in the ninja world would not dare to act rashly..." Filial son: "Are you... sure?" Kind mother: "A family that cuts ice does not raise cattle and sheep! If you are on the same level as a ninja, you will lose the big picture for the sake of the small!" The father and son were speechless when they heard this! Many years later, the filial son said to his parents: "What you said is not true. I will prove it to you [Fan Yitong]
My name is Harry Keener, and I'm 12 years old. The first time I saw the news about Tony Stark, I knew it was a dangerous world out there. Luckily, although I live in the United States, I'm not in the New York accident belt. Being born in Tennessee is pretty safe. If Tony Stark hadn't suddenly smashed through the roof of my farmhouse, I'd have almost believed it.