A book friend asked me what I should write next.
Some people felt that the Li Xingyun I wrote was darkened, while others scolded me, thinking that what I wrote was not the Marshal Li shown in the first ten episodes of Season 6 at all.
So smart, everything you said is right.
Because human nature is so complex.
To explain, I think that the moment Lao Li was reborn from the beginning of the sixth season back to the very beginning, I think Lao Li was like this.
I watched the latest episode. Lao Li and Zhang Zifan worked together to put on a big show. There was no problem. I guessed this when I watched the fifth season. The funny boy in red didn't disappear. I also guessed it. It’s also written in the book.
From the fifth to the sixth season, Li Xingyun was following the plan he and Zhang Zifan planned, but this does not mean that he lost Shangguan Yunque, killed a group of bad guys with his own hands, or even all the feelings and emotions from the fifth season onwards. The pain is all fake, as evidenced by the visions of the late Ohga Mine.
Li Xingyun knew from the beginning, or he felt that he was not capable of making the world unified, but this is how people grow, from recognizing their own shortcomings to doing what they know is impossible for the sake of their beliefs, even though tens of millions of people I'm going, this is where I think Lao Li is better than ****.
This is also the charm of knights.
For Li Xingyun, Uncle Yang, Shangguan Yunque, everyone in Ten Thousand Poison Cave, and even people in the entire world who should not have died are lost and found. The joy of losing and finding will make people more afraid of the despair after losing and regaining.
So I think there is nothing wrong with the Lao Li I portrayed. He has never gone dark from the beginning to the end. He is still the same person who loves Xueer, his junior sister, his master Uncle Yang, his brother Zhang Zifan, and in a sense he loves the commander-in-chief. All the bad guys want to be idle, but now Li Xingyun has grown up, understands the responsibilities he should bear, and can stand alone.
He is neither a bad handsome man who kills the world, nor is he unrepentant. From the beginning to the end, he is the innocent boy who thinks of Xianyun Yehe and disregards the world, but a... living person who is struggling between ideals and reality in his heart.
It's just that my writing skills are still too bad and I didn't write clearly, which is why many book friends didn't see the Lao Li they wanted to see. Here, Xumi bows ninety degrees to express his apology.
I think this kind of deepest analysis of human nature is the charm of Ruo Sen.
Also, a book friend is worried that I will have some health problems if I update twice a day too fast. Thank you for your concern.