A certain scholar once said that the greatest and most enduring art of the Chinese people is men dressing up as women. Huang Xi didn't understand this before, but now he finally grasps the essence of the statement: it can save lives in critical moments! What's it like to pretend to be a ship girl? Especially in a large, powerful port with rich and strong female characters, what's it like? Huang Xi can't say. He can only carefully and cautiously pretend that everything is peaceful and nothing has happened. Anyway, he only needs to pretend for one day, cross-border travel, experience the customs of another world, and take a short break and relax. Thinking about it this way, it doesn't seem like a big problem. Unfortunately, the ship girls in the port don't seem to think so. # #Slice of life, light and fun # #The protagonist will directly transmigrate later, and there is only one port and one commander in the setting # #Not an omega, not yuri, not a transformation, just a harem
I accidentally traveled to a world where shipgirls existed. I thought it was just an ordinary travel, but when I was visiting a park, I met my former shipgirl.
I thought it was amazing enough that the shipgirls in the game traveled with me, but I didn’t expect that in the day-to-day interactions with the shipgirls, I gradually discovered... that I seemed to be a little different from ordinary commanders?
An atypical commander, who can compete in swimming with bluefin tuna, can compete in fencing with the Duke of York, and is proficient in basic ballroom dancing, psychological counseling, pastries, basic baseball, rapier, basic unarmed fighting, swimming, volleyball, tennis, and badminton. He can lift a destroyer
of more than 2,000 tons, and can even carry a battleship of more than 30,000 tons. His swimming speed exceeds that of the fantasy class! Not afraid of electricity, not afraid of poison, the light of justice! (crossed out)
PS: The title is wrong. It’s actually a search for the flow
PPS: The main content is daily life, followed by daily life, and finally daily life. In short, it’s all daily life.