It's a very good novel. It would seem that the plot is standard, but interesting. . Yes, the piano is in the form of a system. Yes, the hero is an actor, not because he has talent, but because he is free. But everything is balanced by the disadvantage of a system in the form of rules. Although the work is easy, it actively shows that there are things more important than gloss, and sometimes helping others is worth your own inconvenience. In my opinion, this is a good thing. How well it turned out to convey the importance of preserving one's own culture. Yes, it's a bit caricatured, and it's kind of ridiculous, but I still think it's good. Although I can understand those to whom the novel did not go. He is light, a little naive and even childish, but still raises important questions. I think the plot is thought out, the author wanted not only to make money. Although, perhaps, the patriotic line was raised not because of the author's beliefs, but because of the censors.
This is a very good novel about multiple transmigration. The plots are quite detailed. The hero does not breed a harem or pink snot, but is busy with his goals. In my opinion, the work has one drawback - the eternal, constant nagging of the author that he will be banned. And perhaps readers should believe and empathize. That was the case in the first chapters of the first story, but the more time passed, the more this whining looked like self-promotion to boost chapter sales.The moderator constantly clarifies that his friend is gay, as if this should show... something, but given the skewed Chinese population, where 10 boys and almost 3 girls out of every 10, gay friends are the norm of society, despite politics.
This author is also very aggressive (especially in the first story) which touches on some taboo topic. But it's not like that! In the USA, they like to write about the time of the struggle for independence. In Japan, it's about the epochs of different dynasties. In Russia, about the centuries of the Empire or the USSR. It's kind of the norm for locals to write about their own story with a touch of fiction to express something (from pain to pride). It's the same in every culture. And in China too. And they write about the famine and about the torture of the Chinese by the Japanese. But this author is pushing so hard that just a little more - and all her books will be gone. All this is a campaign for great self-promotion. And it's very repulsive. For the constant nagging of the author, how hard he works and what kind of sedition he writes and I take off the star. By the 40th chapter of the first story, the nagging really gets to me. Then I just scrolled through the author's personal wishlist, what he wanted to say there, because it was really disgusting.