Where does the confusion come from?

I was busy reading book reviews, and I felt a little touch.

The novel must have pits, no pits, no suspense, no pits, no fun, and no pits is equal to a running account. Regarding how to set up the pit, how to set it, how to solve it, and when to solve it, everyone has their own habits, and they have their own strengths, and their writing techniques are naturally different.

As for my specific words, it's better for everyone to judge.

I just want to say that when the forging immortal sees it now, there may be a pit that has been obviously unfilled?

I don't think so. Because when designing the suspense, I listed them one by one under the outline of the current volume, and the ones that have been filled in will be erased, and the ones that have not been filled in and added will be brought into the outline of the next volume.

The effect of this is to prevent forgetting. Yes, I dare to say that everyone has such a time, including me, writing and forgetting the previous things, for example, forging immortals has been written for a long time now, once it is involved in the content of the previous article, I also need to seriously check back to know the Tao, and there are still some things that cannot be found (sometimes, the memory is really unreliable, I obviously feel that it is there, and when I look for it, I find that there is not).

What do you mean by saying this, I hope that forging immortals can become a book that can be read a second time, because some things are definitely not as clear to readers as I am, and it is normal to be confused occasionally, so when I am occasionally free, I can flip through the previous text and get some other gains, wouldn't it be good?

Don't be afraid of being confused, the pit will be filled, and you will be happy when you solve your doubts, so it's good.

In addition, I hope that when you look at the characters of the Taoist Temple, you will not bring some "not good" habits into it. For example, whoever is whomever is whoever, whoever should own it, and whoever can't write so badly

Believe me, that's not true, and even if the Taoist Academy is defined by me as a relatively beautiful place in the realm of cultivation, it is not a utopia.

Compassion is not in charge of the army, righteousness is not financial management, benevolence is cruel and true in the world of politics, this is the truth.

The cruelty I write about is not the extermination of the race, the country, and the family (of course), but the fierce conflict of human nature, the influence of the world on it, and the distortion.

Well, the topic is big, it's bragging, and it's not likeable, so be it.

Old guns

(To be continued......)