End of Volume Summary
well…
… so tired!
Finally, I have come this far, and finally finished writing The Great Rebellion... (collapses) (foams at the mouth) (passes out)
Before I started this volume, I had already thought of the ending, which was - after I finished writing it, I would shout out, I finally finished The Great Rebellion!
But when I really finished writing... my mind and body were filled with just one word,
"tired"
Too tired
I was so tired that I almost fainted and passed away.
… worn out…
Well... let me not talk about how tired I am, I will first kneel down and apologize.
(Running) (Kneeling and sliding) (Sliding on the concrete) (Takes out the rose in his mouth)
sorry!
I have done my best to write The Great Rebellion, but I know that this volume is definitely not up to par... I will explain it later... No... Explanation...
Let me report the results first.
Before I started reading The Great Rebellion, the book had around 9,000 followers, an average of 13,000 subscriptions, and the highest subscription... Haha, I forgot.
As of the completion of this volume, the book has been followed by about 4 to 5,000 people, with an average subscription of over 14,000. During the years when I stopped updating due to illness, the average subscription reached 15,000, and the highest was 29,000.
As of now, the collection of this book is ninety-nine thousand.
First of all, thank you to every friend who has read here!
YAY!!!!
Thank you for your loyalty, thank you for sticking with me despite my shitty update rate, and thank you for allowing me to finish this chapter even though the perspective of the group protagonist is missing!
Come! Xiao Dengzi kowtows to Dahuo!
(Sprint) (Kneeling slide)
Fuck, go, ignore!
Bang!
All right! (Stands up) (Brushes off the dust on his head)
Ahem (cough twice seriously)
Now let’s get down to business. Let me be crazy for a moment, no, let me talk about my mental journey in writing this volume.
In fact, I had gone crazy many times before starting the Great Rebellion.
I almost dragged anyone I could talk to about the plot with me and went crazy. When I saw an innocent passerby, I would run over and cry loudly, saying, "I'm finished, my book is going to collapse. Someone please help me and make me end the three-dimensional world so that I don't have to face the fact that my writing has collapsed."
The great rebellion was difficult.
There weren't many precedents before me.
There aren't even many precedents for 30k, hh.
After me... After me, the official update of the Great Rebellion was completed (sweat)
I have conceived countless plot lines, overturned and reconstructed countless plots, and thought bitterly every night...
Finally, I had to admit it.
I need to get the protagonist offline so that the logic of the story can continue.
A tree that stands out in the forest will be destroyed by the wind. This is the problem our protagonist faces.
He is too good and his taunt effect is at its maximum, so the Four Gods must attack him first.
But after the protagonist died, I had to face another problem.
The protagonist is gone, who should I write about
Uh uh uh uh ahh ...
So I started to overturn the outline and draft it again.
But after countless deductions... I finally wandered back.
He tremblingly took out the knife and stabbed the protagonist.
Okay, you should try it first.
I drafted four acts, and they were all completed fairly standardly, as you can see, they are:
[Fall of Pluto]—Kill the protagonist!
[The Second Empire]—The wonderful operations of the primarchs.
[Foolish Heart] - The beginning of all tragedies in the original novel, it must be a separate scene! I said!
[Cadia Stands Strong]—The big brawl ends... Open 40k...
I have basically completed the outline.
Actually, I was very panicked. I was almost scared to death when I opened this volume.
Because no matter how I go about it I can't avoid group portraits, but my book was not a group portrait style before, so it's not a good idea to do so, but really, there's really no other way.
Finally, I chose the group portrait style for this volume.
Some unpleasant things happened in the third dimension, but it didn’t affect my state.
Act 2, the protagonist! My protagonist! What happened to you?!
I almost panicked. Seriously, I'm very timid and this innovative way of writing gave me so much fear that my scalp went numb.
As a result, I didn't perform very well in this volume, and I was frantically rushing to catch up, and the dropped data also confirmed this.
In fact, in this volume, the six people in the two empires can create a lot of wonderful chemical reactions. If you really want me to write it, I can write 500,000 words.
But because I was in such a panic, I had to rush through the plot.
Act 3. Because the Act 3 in my outline was relatively short, and the foreshadowing of the Magnus line had already been laid out, all I had to do was reveal it, and I wrote it relatively smoothly.
In my outline, the Great Rebellion has two climaxes. One is when the protagonist appears in the first act, and the other is when Xiao Ma Ge’s adviser enters the game and wins half a step over heaven.
Brother Xiao Ma completed my assignment excellently and went offline happily.
In the fourth act, I suddenly died in reality, with the flu, final exams, and a big assignment. It was game over, so some of the writing was dragged out, or maybe it was too superficial.
I felt a bit exhausted, and basically I wrote with my last breath, with the only thought in my mind being that I had to finish this story.
I'm really, really not good at writing tragedies.
I was so tired that I thought about it countless times - should I just finish it on hh? This way, I can finish telling a story.
But in the process of fighting with my own thoughts, I still felt that hh could not be finished, and I had to continue.
So I forced myself to write it down.
The final rebellion ending was written with great difficulty, and I was very confused because I felt that I had said everything I could say - but the word count and rhythm could not be improved.
Let me put it this way, my previous one, Mortarion's Revenge of Curze, only used 7,000 words.
The following Magnus the Fool and the Red-Hearted Man only took up 6,000 words.
My explosive points cannot be written at length, and I cannot use the number of words to create a grand or slow-paced effect.
I also despair at not being able to write long.
What a failure. What a failure.
So again, apologies.
I'm sorry I couldn't do better.
But at least... he exhaled weakly... at least he had finished telling the story of the Great Rebellion in a coherent and relatively clear way...
At least—I’ve finished this volume!
Well, I know the root of the problem.
First, the style of the Great Rebellion is different from the previous ones. It is not only a group portrait, but also a relatively depressing style.
Second, I made a mistake, which I cannot excuse.
Third, the updates are sparse and even worse.
It is a triple buff of decision-making error + ability error + update error.
But... But this volume of mine... is like walking on thin ice... This is the best solution I can think of.
This is the best solution I can think of in terms of the style of this book.
I have been walking on thin ice all my life! But I finally made it to the other side!!!
Uh uh uh uh—Ah ...
Screaming in despair
But it’s over! It’s over! It’s over!
it's over!
Next, I will sort out the plot and timeline of 40k (the timeline will definitely be changed a lot). I will first update the extra chapters for a while, as well as some more important things after the Heresy.
How to update this part while waiting for my new volume notification.
In 40k, the story returns to the protagonist's perspective, and semi-group portraits may be used depending on the rhythm, but it will definitely not be so long.
And the tone of 40k is tentatively set to be purely cool.
Here in the book review section, I am collecting chapters and some technology trees.
Beep beep—see you tomorrow! (ω)
(End of this chapter)