Let’s open a single chapter here and talk about the protagonist. The plot about killing the white-eyed wolf and arousing the suspicion of the dryad grandmother is a normal logical reasoning. If you don't doubt the protagonist, it will appear to be witty.
The following chapter where the black bear demon Tie Kui provokes the protagonist is actually a foreshadowing. The main character in this chapter is actually not the protagonist at all, but I deliberately did not describe it too much for fear of being spoiled by smart readers. .
In the end, this book is ultimately a good read. You are tired of watching the plot of killing the young and coming to the old. I am tired of watching it too. It makes me sick to write it myself. So readers don’t have to worry about offending someone. Like this all over the world, there will be other major events later in the article that will allow the protagonist to escape the influence of the death of the white-eyed wolf.
At present, the plot has begun to progress to the part of contact with human monks. This plot is written to awaken the protagonist's demonic nature. Readers who are following up can actually feel it from the lines. Although the protagonist is struggling in the demon world, he has always been out of place because of him. I have never considered myself a monster. When this plot ends, the protagonist's monster nature and humanity will coexist, hence the sentence in the introduction, "I'm sorry for being born a monster."
At the end, let's recruit a demon cultivator number for the protagonist. The author named it Fei. Anyone with good ideas can leave a message in this chapter.