Film and Television Beacon Fire: I Have an Equipment Column

Chapter 48 Briefly talk about the protagonist’s plug-in

Chapter 48 Let’s briefly talk about the protagonist’s cheats
Regarding the use of the equipment column, readers have given a lot of opinions, some of which I will adopt later, and some of which are due to my presentation problems, leading to misunderstandings.

Among all the comments, I feel that it was the book friend who talked about making a stand-in doll who got what I meant the most.

You can completely understand this equipment column as a pinch model, and then you put the model of other things on him. Then where the two models overlap, the character can share equipment attributes.

However, it cannot be done where the character and equipment do not overlap.

Is this easy to understand?

This is also the reason why full-body armor and stand-in dolls are made.

If you use steel plates as the book friend said, blocking the front will not block the back, or even the side.

As for making a completely wrapped cylindrical steel ball, concrete ball or the like.

I'm not very good at math, but you can also do the math. A ball with a diameter of more than 1.7 meters, or 1.8 meters, has what is its surface area, and how thick can it be if the weight is limited?
I calculated that after six sets of full-body armor, the thickness of the armor is close to 90 mm, which is twice the armor of T34. Let alone guns, even guns cannot penetrate it.

Can it be made into such a big ball or cylinder and have such strong protective power?
The other is the contact surface. Making it a spherical cylinder means that the model is larger and the contact surface is larger, making it easier to be hit.

I didn’t explain these in detail before, because who would read an online article and listen to you talk about a lot of settings first?

Even the beginning of Chapter 1 was rejected because of too much delay.

It's like introducing Greek mythology to someone who doesn't understand the Olympian mythology at all.

You started talking about Zeus, the god of thunder and lightning, and Athena, the goddess of wisdom. How many people would listen?

But if you start by saying:

There is a man who likes to cheat
Isn’t this interest already there?

So I really can’t say too much or too much detail about a lot of things. If I say too much, I will make many mistakes, and there will be no need to read the story.

As for the issue of letting go of guns, it’s not that the protagonist doesn’t let go and doesn’t try, but it’s a matter of mindset. If your understanding of this thing is this at the beginning, then before you come into contact with other things, your mindset is It's hard to change.

Just like if you throw a gun to a primitive man and don't teach him to shoot, of course he can only use the gun as a fire stick.

The same is true for the protagonist. If he thinks this line is suitable at first, then usually he will follow this thinking until the line is finished or he does not receive other stimulation.

I'll definitely talk about how the gun should look when put in it later, but we have to do it step by step.

Actually, I don’t want to say so much, because saying too much would basically be like giving out the outline.

But there are many doubts in the comment area, so I thought about it and answered them.

Let’s talk about this today.

(End of this chapter)

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