Type
Genre
Tags[ ]
Rating(4.2 / 5.0, 252 votes)
5 | 60% (152 votes) |
4 | 19% (47 votes) |
3 | 10% (24 votes) |
2 | 6% (14 votes) |
1 | 6% (15 votes) |
Language
Support Book (#ad)
Author(s)
One entry per lineArtist(s)
One entry per lineYear
Example: 2012Status in COO
Status in Country of Origin. One entry per lineLicensed
Completely Translated
Original Publisher
One entry per lineEnglish Publisher
One entry per lineRelease Frequency
Every 37.5 Day(s)Activity Stats [Graph]
Weekly Rank: #5529Monthly Rank: #3928
All Time Rank: #2332
Reading List [Graph]
On 3934 Reading Lists
Monthly Rank: #808
All Time Rank: #2013
Description
Links are NOT allowed. Format your description nicely so people can easily read them. Please use proper spacing and paragraphs.When Ji Mingxia woke up, he had transmigrated as the male supporting lead in a horror novel and had become the protagonist shou’s love mentor.
His open view of love guides the protagonist shou to embrace his sexuality; every time he appears, it’s to promote the protagonist gong’s love.
To survive, Ji Mingxia had to follow the plot.
When the protagonist shou tells him about his troubles, he gently comforts the protagonist shou;
When the protagonist shou suffers heavy physical and mental trauma, he actively treats the protagonist shou;
When the protagonist shou comes across danger, he recklessly accompanies the protagonist shou;
When the protagonist shou confesses to him, he…
The protagonist gong? Where did the protagonist gong go?!
What about the supporting characters? Hurry, spare tires!
“You mean those shifty-eyed men who peek at you? They’ll never show up again. ”
Ji Mingxia: “=0=”
Please wake up, protagonist! They’re looking at you, not me!
Yu Ning X Ji Mingxia
Solitary and reclusive, sweet attacker after being tempted × calm on the surface but terrified in the heart
Associated Names
One entry per lineRelated Series
N/ARecommendations
This Damned Thirst for Survival (2)Transmigrating Into The Heartthrob’s Cannon Fodder Childhood Friend (1)
Don’t You Like Me (1)
Pulling Together a Villain Reformation Strategy (1)
Phantom Skeleton Painting (1)
Kaleidoscope of Death (1)
Recommendation Lists
Latest Release
Date | Group | Release |
---|---|---|
10/31/22 | Ckanda Writes | c110 part2 |
10/31/22 | Ckanda Writes | c110 part1 |
10/31/22 | Ckanda Writes | c109 part2 |
10/30/22 | Ckanda Writes | c109 part1 |
10/30/22 | Ckanda Writes | c108 part2 |
10/30/22 | Ckanda Writes | c108 part1 |
10/26/22 | Ckanda Writes | c107 part2 |
10/26/22 | Ckanda Writes | c107 part1 |
10/25/22 | Ckanda Writes | c106 part2 |
10/25/22 | Ckanda Writes | c106 part1 |
10/25/22 | Ckanda Writes | c105 part2 |
10/24/22 | Ckanda Writes | c105 part1 |
10/24/22 | Ckanda Writes | c104 part2 |
10/24/22 | Ckanda Writes | c104 part1 |
10/21/22 | Ckanda Writes | c103 part2 |
He literally arrives outside of the plot but decides that he has to follow the original plot he shouldn't be present for at that moment.
Not to mention that he has an ability the original body doesn't have in the book.
That should be enough to conclude that "the plot" is invalid. Even when he finally realises that the characters from the novel are in fact people with a backstory, traits, etc. that weren't mentioned in the book, he still insists on "the plot".
He directly watches people deviate from the novel but is already shipping the original shou and gong, dead set on bringing them together. After THE WHOLE PLOT has already completely changed and nothing happened to him that indicates that it's a bad thing.
How he doesn't see that he was put into the original shou's spot and the original guy turned into the gong, even after so many clear incidences, makes zero sense. It's like he has negative IQ. Apart from that, he comes to very strange conclusions that only exist to cause drama.
He has to be friends with the protag? Then it's a good idea to ruin his relationship with the guy, because it seems to be easier to make up with him years later, when he's no longer alone and has no reason to talk to MC, instead of just being nice to the boy NOW when he's all alone and starving for friends. "But the plot!"
It's the writer's nonsensical reasoning behind everything that's completely irrational. No research went into any aspects of this novel, the writer loves to use injuries, gruesome wounds and gore, and clearly shows that they didn't bother to do basic research.
Dead people with actively infected wounds, infected injuries treated in ways that would triple the bacteria load in just a day but miraculously heals it... it would have taken two minutes to look this up. Characterisation is stereotypical, side characters have little personality, and grown men past 30 act the same as 19 years old college kids but with what the writer seems to think of as "deep thoughts" to show maturity. The whole novel is extremely juvenile, it reads like a hobby-project from a teen, especially how the writer portrays adults is in line with how someone who isn't one would do it. A massive problem, plot holes and contradictions pop up right at the start of the novel, later on the writer recaps incidences differently from how they took place. They didn't bother to keep track of their own story or just re-read what they wrote prior. If all of this isn't bad enough, the writer must think their readers are mentally handicapped toddlers.
We don't need 18 paragraphs of explanation for every miniscule thing, neither do we need a three pages long recap of the whole damn incidence that we just read.
The story isn't complicated, it's high-school level at best. It's honestly insulting. There's no romance either up to chapter 100 of 140, I have no idea when it would start because I ain't sticking around longer. TL;DR: Description is bait, no logic, juvenile writing, bad characterisation, constant repeats, probably written by a teen that didn't do basic research or beta-read their own story.
- I like the world building and that there are actual rules to the horror.
- Cute relationship with decent development and both sides being good to each other
- Both mains aren't too frustrating and develop. I like that MC also had time to not always be a coward and actually shine
-So, this is one of the rare occasions where I stayed for the romance solely and not the plot. Because—let's face it, the plot was super bland. It could be summed up in ten sentences. Each little horror arc felt plain and nothing special. The "mystery" element was the author concealing details and then revealing it as significant to the mystery's unraveling. The details also... didn't really make sense? Like they were there, but it sparked no amazement from me. Rather it was just like... "ok." There was no impact, despite the horror element being done well. Tension didn't really build throughout the story, and all the events felt loosely connected. Even when grand reveals were announced, there was no build up to spark that "damn" factor. It honestly feels the author wrote the horror arcs with a specific audience in mind... maybe kindergarteners? So yeah, the plot felt simplistic and honestly not that much horror-y novel. Characters & Relationships ON THE OTHER HAND: the ML and MC? Chef's kiss. I loved them both. ML is genius smart and MC is average smart (if you get the gist). So MC kinda just strings along ML but he does serve his purpose and is quite likable in his ability to face scary sh*t head on (donning a hilariously calm face that fools people) for the people he loves. He also adores the ML and is quite protective of him, which is so so cute. ML is low key psycho and scary but high key a fluff ball that is whipped for the MC. He literally CATERS to his every need. MC has back pain after falling? ML massages. MC and ML camping? ML makes MC is well fed and living like a king. Like holy shit, ML is such a green flag for our MC. He's so so whipped despite being cold and scary and he's not possessive in the sense that it sends chills down your spines and he actually respects MC's choices. Like oh my lord, this man has ME whipped along with the MC. They also communicated with each other so well that it made me tear up because god I would've dropped this novel if their romance was prolonged due to s*upid misunderstandings. So yes, the "I'll die for you" dynamic + communication in their relationship was such a highlight that it made me bump this novel up.5 a star. Summary
Overall, a good read for a nice relationship but a mediocre plot. Come for the romance, not thriller or horror.