The top or the previous episode opened and rushed to the end & the real historical background & Lao Xie was fictional, which made me a little lost. Opened it up and thought it was Torfin's counterattack, and ended up discovering that it was the life of Lao Xie, who was born with shame and died in honor; the prince's awakening was at the moment of epiphany & the missionary's faith was at the moment of the prince's "overlord's color"; if we say The author uses the form of a prince and a daughter to try his best to satirize the portrayal of what kind of situation the royal family can sacrifice in order to avoid being sharp-edged. So is the ugly image of the king also a mockery of the slave of power? Great love is like the sun/snowflakes, no complaints, no regrets, no competition, no robbing of every inch of life, and the climax of anti-war and anti-class climaxes at the moment when Lao Xie shouted his name and called the king of Great Britain suddenly cut off the king's head. Lao Xie's eyes and Toru's hints portray the prince's conspiracy but not so fully mature very well. What kind of person is Lao Xie - a person who grew up in suffering and worked hard to get rid of it. The most painful thing is being a slave, and the most hated is the Viking, even if he is half a Viking; courageous, resourceful and responsible What's more is a sense of responsibility for this era. In contrast, the moment Torfin released the dagger...it was the legacy of his biological father and his father's enemy/master.
To mention a tearful point, the silent design of Lao Xie and Biao Lun's duel is really wonderful, and Lao Xie's panicked sorry & Biao Lun expressed his desire to be Lao Xie's friend request, it is worth crying.
Looking forward to the second season.
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