The first feeling is tired. This film is like playing a clearance game, but there is no save point. As long as you don't hit the animation, you have to play it again from the beginning. This requires great patience and perseverance. Why do you feel so concerned about AB, it's because people who don't know this won't have the patience to play it over and over again. Of course, there is a great god who has a life to pass the level, but it has nothing to do with this film. So this film is obviously not a single-life clearance, it is an infinite mode at all.
The male protagonist’s mode of breaking through is a pattern of exploration, discovering the problem bit by bit, and then solving it, but the killer showdown is not so dominant, except that Guanyin took a little bit of work, and basically can’t remember the others. The first 140 times ended with a drink in a bar, obviously not enterprising. Until one day I remembered the gift my ex-wife said, then read a book, found the tracker, went to the boss’ lair, learned swordsmanship, saved the ex-wife, and saved the world. The turning point in all this is seeing my son. The driving force behind all this is to save his son.
It's still my usual view that the most jerk of men is their arrogance. This arrogance is also reflected in sacrifice. He can stand in front of you when the truck hits you, but he can’t do it to pick you up and go to school every day for a year, cook for you, wash dishes after meals, tell you bedtime stories, and then be locked up by the corner The lights go out. They are more willing to make a great sacrifice that is imminent, and disdain for silent sacrifice.
So, a good man you want, remember to create some difficulty for him.
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