1. I'm glad I read the synopsis after watching up to 10 episodes cuz why's there's such a big spoiler?? 2. can somebody tell me, if Wang Cuihua and Zhang San knew each other as children in the real world? I'm just curious whether it's that childhood connection trope again lol (also, sorry for constantly asking for spoilers; I just wanna have my guesses confirmed - or not)
so in my understanding...xiahou dan transmigrated when he was a kid...and planted the sos flowersbut when he met…
yeah, so he transmigrated as a middle school student (a child!!) and I haven't read the novel, but my guess is, he doesn't want Yu Wanyin to lose hope about returning to the real world as he can't give her a definite answer (considering the fact that he's been stuck in this world for over 15 years). in the beginnig of ep. 10 he also said, that he was afraid from her distancing herself from him after telling the truth cuz he thinks she won't trust him anymore or sth
Tbh, the ML and FL are getting hard to root for. The ML killed the minister in a completely heartless way, without…
spoilers:
apparently ML's been stuck in this "paper world" for over 15 years. having to survive while experiencing traumatic events (most likely coming in the later episodes), propably made him immune to all that. that's why it makes sense even if he's a "modern guy".
yeah, I really thought this was gonna be some light comedy, but now I'm feeling anxious for what's coming 😭 he's suffered alone for so long and he's never had anyone to rely on in a completely different world where he doesn't know about anything as a child. this is so heartbreaking...
makes sense, why he would try to give her hope then.. but apparently he also doesn't want her to distance herself from him after telling the truth, judging by the new eps. I'm loving how layered the plot is
omg yes! I was thinking the same. I'm also kinda confused cuz aren't protagonists supposed to be "good"??…
yeah I get it... I feel like a lot of the time we end up going along w/ whatever the protagonist does just because they’re the main character, and that kinda becomes the justification in itself 😅 even when their actions aren’t exactly morally “good”.. so if the exact same story were told from the villain’s perspective, we’d probably be rooting for them instead. I haven’t read that many c-novels myself, but I’ve definitely noticed the trope cuz the line between hero and villain can get pretty blurry depending on who’s narrating
No he makes her drunk every night! He is the majesty if he orders she has to! In fact in a teaser released, ML…
omg I came across these spoilers by chance, but now it all makes sense, like that was why he looked so relieved when Yu Wanyin arrived.. this is heartbreaking, he deserves the world
as a middle school student is crazy!! especially since he transmigrated to a "historical-type" setting where he could get killed anytime 💔 also wondering what made him lie about him being a ceo irl :((
guys, can someone who read the novel or watched the other adaptions pls spoil me if ML transmigrated at the same time as FL like he said or whether he's actually been there for a much longer time? (some things he said in ep. 7 & 8 left me confused)
No. The main leads transmigrate into characters who are originally villains in the novel where the leads are Xie…
okay, thanks! but 2nd FL is always alled a 2D character and in ep. 6 Fl also mentions Xie Yong'er's real name is Ma Chunchun, so I concluded 2nd FL must have been from another "real/modern" world within the book where our main leads transmigrated into?
wait, so is this drama about the main leads from the real world transmigrating as side characters into a real novel about a girl (Xie Yong'er) who transmigrated into a novel?? I don't get it (haven't watched all the other adaptions either) that's what the 1st ep was about?
2. can somebody tell me, if Wang Cuihua and Zhang San knew each other as children in the real world? I'm just curious whether it's that childhood connection trope again lol (also, sorry for constantly asking for spoilers; I just wanna have my guesses confirmed - or not)
apparently ML's been stuck in this "paper world" for over 15 years. having to survive while experiencing traumatic events (most likely coming in the later episodes), propably made him immune to all that. that's why it makes sense even if he's a "modern guy".
makes sense, why he would try to give her hope then.. but apparently he also doesn't want her to distance herself from him after telling the truth, judging by the new eps. I'm loving how layered the plot is
I haven’t read that many c-novels myself, but I’ve definitely noticed the trope cuz the line between hero and villain can get pretty blurry depending on who’s narrating