Chapter 91 Remarks on the launch
It's time to put it on the shelves again.

I will try my best to update as soon as possible and add more chapters depending on the situation.

At one o'clock in the afternoon, a total of four chapters were posted, including the chapter this morning, a total of five chapters.

I won’t promise too much about subsequent updates, but I’ll do my best.

Generally speaking, unless there are special circumstances, updates will be made at 8 a.m., 12 noon, and 6 p.m., for a total of three chapters.

Here are the author's comments
……

I'm not pretending to be a newbie, I'm just an old loser.

I have written a long novel before, "Time Loop: Being Caught by the Six Gates at the Beginning".

The results were not very good, about 2000 points on average, and 330 million words were successfully completed.

After all, I'm not a genius.

Things like Sanjiang, Xiaolaba, Dafengjin, Qiangjin, Boutique, and Ten Thousand Subscriptions have nothing to do with me.

When I look at those authors who dare to cut their books, abandon their best works, or stop updating after tens of thousands of subscriptions, I feel like looking at them as if they are gods.

It is impossible to understand their behavior and state.

I can only say that I am envious, jealous and hateful. I have them all.

The gap between a genius and a failure is not just about grades, but also about writing experience.

To be honest, there's really no need to criticize the author for his failure.

Just looking at the data in the background is the highest level of mental torture for them.

For example, out of a hundred collections, only one reader is reading them.

For example, if the ratio of collections to follow-up readings exceeds 20 to 1, it means that the content is completely unattractive.

Data can't prove that you write well.

But it definitely means that what you write is unpopular.

The data in the writer's background tortures and torments failed authors every day.

Anxiety, breakdown, retching, self-denial and loneliness.

This is the pain that almost every failed author has to go through, and it shortens his lifespan by several years.

After all, the average life expectancy of authors is often below average.

Along the way, authors of the same period and friends in the group fell down one after another.

Most of them couldn't bear the pressure and committed suicide.

If this person went to a mental hospital, I would check everyone's new book period, and the flops should all be depressed. Genius writing is different.

They can obtain a steady stream of data growth, and this data growth will bring a strong sense of pleasure, prompting them to write better works.

As a result of the lack of data feedback, the failed authors need to spend several hours every day to stabilize their emotions and avoid collapse.

The audience sequences in my favorite work, Lord of Mysteries, are the least likely to get out of hand.

At the same time, writers are indeed the most likely to go crazy.

A genius cannot understand the pain of failure.

The urge to cut it off came up in my mind countless times, I persuaded myself countless times, and I denied myself countless times.

If pain is expressed by water, it would be the water of the Yangtze River, which is endless.

Fortunately, I have managed to get through the painful two-month new book period.

Yes, I made it through.

7000 favorites, around 500 follow-ups.

Do you think this result is good?
Actually, it’s not good either.

500 first orders is probably impossible, but at least it’s not that bad.

So I am very grateful.

I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the readers who have followed along the way, and to the friends who like this work.

Without you, I don't know how I would survive.

Finally, I sincerely ask for your subscription.

For authors, the higher the subscription, the more motivation they have to write.

I don't dare to ask for rewards, monthly tickets or anything like that, I always feel that I don't deserve it.

I write stories to give readers a little pleasure and in return I get subscriptions, which is a fair trade.

So I just ask for a subscription.

After all, subscriptions are the author’s anchor, preventing them from losing control easily.

Of course I will try my best to ensure quality and write an interesting, thoughtful and refreshing book.

See you this afternoon.

(End of this chapter)

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