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Readers’ appetites are also too big…

 Post a single chapter to clarify.

First of all, it is clear that the protagonist has no plan to enter Shu because his strength does not allow it.

Let's clarify a few questions.

(1) Some people say that I want to give the protagonist a reverse cheat.

I am very helpless. Is this a positive golden finger? In the battle between Li Maozhen and Zhu Mei, it is very likely that one side will be defeated, and then the other side will take care of the overall situation and will not give the protagonist a chance at all.

(2) Under the current situation, it is impossible to attack Shu.

Thousands of people enter Shu, and the possibility of success is very small. Don't count on vassal vassal towns. In my deduction, they are never considered reliable. As for the fighting will and combat effectiveness of vassal vassal towns, I believe that the performance of all parties during the struggle for hegemony between Liang and Jin has already convinced them.

Everyone can see clearly that they are basically the first to be defeated. Most of the time, they simply fail to work and may even defect.

(3) Entering Shu through two vassal vassals? Are you serious?

Anyone who dares to make this decision will be simply never hired.

(4) Today the focus is still on the Central Plains.

How many troops are needed to enter Sichuan? Be careful, 50,000. Where do you get 50,000 troops? We are going to war with Zhu Quanzhong again, and we have to be careful about Li Keyong, and we have to keep troops in the rear to guard them, so we can't draw them out at all.

The advantage of the protagonist's territory is that it has a rear area, but don't think it has no disadvantages. The disadvantage is that the place is too big, far apart from each other, and transportation is inconvenient, so it is necessary to retain troops to defend it.

Zhu Quanzhong's disadvantage is that he is the site of the Fourth Battle. His advantage is that the areas are clustered together and the transportation is convenient. He does not need to leave too many troops to guard the place and can exert most of his strength. Now the main thing is to deal with him.

(5) This is a small branch line. I don’t plan to write more about it. It is just to balance the situation in Shuzhong. It is a positive golden finger. But your appetite is too big. This is something I didn’t expect...

(6) Old readers of the last book know that I wrote more than 10 million words without an outline. This book also has no outline. All situations are based on current situations. The reactions, developments, etc. of the various forces in the book are all

It changes dynamically, step by step, and I don’t know what the next change will be.

Some readers say that I have written such and such in my outline. I want to clarify that I do not have an outline.

Originally this book was planned to be submitted internally to a certain editor, but because internal submission required an outline, I gave up and published it directly.

I think it is unreasonable to outline a historical deduction novel, because how could the author predict how it will develop later when he first started writing the book? The politics, economy, military, etc. of various forces are all changing dynamically.

, this outline needs to be simulated with a supercomputer to know the direction of each step, right?

Final summary: I was clearly giving the protagonist a forward cheat, and the book also said that he was taking risks and balancing the situation, but someone actually said he was giving a reverse cheat. This...


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