Freezing three feet is not a day's cold, and listen to me slowly.

After calming down, I felt that I had just gone a little too far.

However, I've been putting up with it for a long time.

Towards the end of World War II, I started to transition to new books, and someone jumped out and said, "Wow, it's like the Xiling Empire", so I overturned the whole setting and started anew.

At the beginning of this book, there were also people in the book review area who called, Noah is Dingdong, right? At first, I thought he was talking about the blue-skinned tanuki with the bucket waist, but it took me a long time to know that it was the Xiling Empire again.

When it was written about the Tula, someone jumped out and said that it was the Hiling Empire.

However, in my book, all the settings are moved from European and American science fiction, and in European and American science fiction, human beings elevate dolphins as assistants abound, and the Tula people here are based on the dolphins in Robert Sawyer's "Constellation", with a little change - all the settings in this book have been quite deformed and original, otherwise it would not be a tribute but a plagiarism.

I guess that the Tula people are copied from the Hiling Empire, and when you look at Robert Sawyer's constellation, you will shout that this is something from the Hiling Empire, I have seen it!

And the Jocka, I just remember that I saw such a race full of methane in a science fiction world translation novel, and the Jucka's worship of the circle comes from another work, which tells about a priest who went to preach to the Martians, because the Martians are spherical, so he changed the image of Jesus to a spherical shape, which sparked a round of discussion and speculation. I vaguely remember that this was a work by Frederick Pohl, but I couldn't find it in my portfolio. In short, it must be the work of a certain master that has not run away.

Then I put out the setting that blends the essence of the thoughts of the two masters, the round Joka man, and guess what, clams.

"There are also in the Xiling Empire! The author must be an apostle! ”

My first reaction when I saw this speech was: You haven't seen science fiction outside the Xiling Empire, right?

To be honest, I'm chilled.

I've put together so many sci-fi works I've read, the ones I remember the names and the ones I don't remember the names, all in one book, and I put a lot of effort into making sure that all the settings are in harmony and that all the settings are in line with the standards of moe works.

In exchange for this kind of response, I really want to flip the table.

So when I wrote the plot of the Tula people, I was already scared, and I threw out the novel as inspiration, "There is no return", don't you think that the introduction of this short science fiction suddenly appeared in the book is super abrupt, because there is no way not to be abrupt! I'm just afraid that the aquatic races in the Xiling Empire have also tried to transform themselves to adapt to the gaseous planet, but I'm afraid that someone will jump out and say, "Wow, Xiling Empire!" ”

I've had enough.

In the past few days, I have thrown a lot of settings, and I have seen someone in the Tixiling Empire, and my book is so obviously the basic setting of "Fire on the Abyss", you fucking said "other civilizations must have entered the leap realm", I must be happy to talk to you, what are you talking about, Daddy or something, I know what you are talking about! Who dictates that you have to see the Brewing Empire to write a space opera or what?

Whoever ordered him to get out, I beat him to death.

Seriously, the annual meeting is coming soon, and my plane tickets have been booked, and if such a thing happens, it must be embarrassing to see Yuan Tong at the annual meeting later, and I have to apologize to him.

But I couldn't stand it.

Okay, okay, there are still a lot of powerful science fiction in the world, not only the Xiling Empire is called science fiction! If you read a few more, you'll die! (To be continued......)