Answer a Few Questions
There are a few questions, which I will answer here. Because many book friends don't read the book review area. There are a few book friends who complain that these chapters are unreasonable. My point of view is just the opposite. If you are an old book friend and have read the rules of the trial thoroughly, you should be able to see that these chapters are precisely the most difficult to write in this book so far, and the chapters with the highest technical content. I will answer briefly here.
Question 1, the protagonist is obviously awesome, but why doesn't he wantonly kill and plunder.
The author replied: Please read the trial rules carefully, the points of different jade cards have different meanings to each person. If the protagonist starts killing as soon as he enters the trial area, even if he kills all the martial arts boys, how many jade tokens can he find by himself? Is it more efficient for one person to find fifty jade tokens, or is it more efficient for one person to find fifty jade tokens? Once the balance of power is broken, the strategies of the other warriors will inevitably turn to defense, and the efficiency of the protagonist in finding cards will inevitably be greatly reduced.
Question 2: It is totally unreasonable to look for jade tokens. Someone found them and hid them. Kill him and don't take it out.
The author replied: Each jade card has different points for different people. May I ask, if you find a two-point jade tablet on hand, should you hide it? Or is it more cost-effective to wait for an opportunity to exchange for a jade card with higher points? As a book friend said, when everyone's strength is similar, the protagonist fishes with a jade card to lure others into the bait. Why can't other martial arts have the same mentality? Putting it on the body and hiding it have different meanings.
Question 3: Why is the main character so powerful that he still fights with No. 36 and directly kills people to get cards.
The protagonist is very powerful, but first, can you be sure that the opponent really has a card? Secondly, can you ensure that other people will not be disturbed when you kill? A protagonist who is too strong will inevitably cause panic in the entire team. Once everyone panics, the jade card will definitely not be hidden on the body, and the efficiency of the protagonist's card acquisition will be lower, rather than just killing people to get cards. Martial arts boys are not puppets, they stand in place waiting for you to kill, and the cards are in your hands waiting for you to pick them up. Even if it is a PC. Can't we expect the martial arts boys to wait for the protagonist to kill people and get cards?
So to win cards, the best way is not to kill with a high profile, but to sap a low profile. It is the kingly way to get enough 80 points for cross-district trial as soon as possible. This is a card-taking trial, and killing people is not the original purpose. Killing is to get better cards.
Summary: I don't want the protagonist to kill the Quartet, but obviously it is necessary to use different strategies in different scenes and situations. The character of the protagonist is not blindly forbearing. I believe everyone has seen the confrontation with the Ximen lord. The protagonist should make a move, and when it is time to explode, he will never be vague. According to the rules of this trial, it is destined that you will not be able to win smoothly by relying on your arrogance alone. Intelligence and intrigue are very important. The protagonist is obviously going to fight across regions. How can he win in the end if he is limited to the corners and corners of this side?