There are indeed some things in the slot, and the slot people really can't see it. The European and American realistic humanistic background of the male protagonist's change in attitude towards killing demons? After the strife the queen closes the door instead of another boring fight and returns to the dialogue with the old knight in the original plot? When a monster enters a city, it just kills the army. The army is a symbol of power. This kind of power is the magic weapon for ruling the city, right? European ghosts did not slaughter cities. Not killing innocents. Why does the Archon reward hunters with gold coins in sets? Where do the coins come from? In the Middle Ages, people who believed in people, ghosts, monsters, and beasts were originally moving magical stories that contained countless profound reflections on realism. After the magic of the European Middle Ages, there was the Renaissance and the Industrial Revolution. The beautiful medieval magic culture buried in the modern society will never fade, and the beliefs established for people will last forever. With idealism and later universal values, we can have the current spiritual civilization. It is indeed a clichéd love story, but it is true that only love and justice run through history and the present, and run through magic and reality. With such good special effects, it is a movie that looks back to the Middle Ages with modern elements. The point I want to make is that today's rotten virtual games don't have to be combined with games to say that it's the culprit that has sullied the way people look at medieval European magical culture. Hope to face up to all the classics. Ok.
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Seventh Son reviews