However, despite the above shortcomings, there are still remarkable points in the plot. Compared with the grander story background of the original comics, this work has a more delicate description of the characters' emotions (such as the reaction of Edo's body after he failed, such as making it more difficult for me to accept the death of Colonel Hughes). Many characters who play soy sauce in the big story are also flesh and blood here.
In addition, although the ending is not satisfactory, I still feel heartbroken after reading it (the ending of the 03 edition is almost the same as the one made by the FFF group: Hawkeye stays in the center, Da Zuo is exiled to the north; behind the gate of Edo, Wen Li's old hometown; brothers hold hands in another world, Incompetent to stay behind and close the door. BG BL hurts TT indiscriminately), but the setting of the parallel world is very interesting, and my admiration for Edward Beans has once again exploded: the genius chemist of the A world (the youngest national alchemist) Teacher), a genius physicist in the B world (a rocket developer in Nazi Germany), I have always felt that being a scientist in one world is already very powerful, but Ed has mastered the truth of two worlds at the same time in just a few years! It's just too bullshit.
But what moved the audience most about Xiaodouzi must not be his IQ, right? Although in the juvenile manga, the protagonists of the full-level genre have always been more popular than the protagonists of the level-level genre, but Edo is the first male protagonist in the bear child age group (14, 15 years old) to win my favor. Don't know how to describe Edo's character, but it's like a character that only a woman, a mother (a great mother, not a bear child's mother) can create: he has flaws, but is ultimately embraced by love, in He grew up in the pain of overthrowing himself, and eventually became a good boy with a heart of steel.
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