It's over, let's talk about it (put a readership)

I just came back from outside, and I happened to have some time, and I read everyone's comments and answered some questions first.

1. About the blue-faced fox

The identity of the blue-faced fox: At the tomb of the Xuannu, he and Huang Old Man, Lin Wenjing, Liu Nan, and Wangcai formed the Four Spirits, and they were the Hu family members of the four families of Hu, Huang and Bailiu.

Clue: Belongs to the Yin Yang Pavilion, was assigned by the Yin Yang Pavilion master who was in the chaos period at the time (in fact, it is equivalent to being assigned by a slut), and disposed of the Liu family's affairs, but was captured by Liu Tingxuan and the Bai family halfway through, and imprisoned in the ancient tomb of Southern Xinjiang (many years later, he met Lu Jing and the third uncle).

After that, the blue-faced fox was made into a yin puppet by the third uncle (Feng Yuanya). After that, the third uncle was reincarnated by Granny Mo, and the yin puppet had no owner and returned to the Yin Yang Pavilion.

After that, he was subject to the master of the Yin and Yang Pavilion (at this time, Master Qingzi's spiritual wisdom had awakened), went to catch Liu Tingxuan, and caught Wangcai, and locked her in the cave, in order to urge her snake mother side and prepare for the re-establishment of the Four Immortal Gates behind. It's just that Wangcai later went back to Lu Jing's side.

The character of the blue-faced fox is a shadow clue, and in the book, it represents a rootless character.

2. Third uncle

The child in the back is the reincarnated third uncle, who was placed there by Granny Mo, with a bronze ring on his body. When Lu Jing saw it, he naturally understood. Granny Mo is impossible to appear, because there is too much taboo in it.

3. About Lu Jing's life experience

Lu Jing is a child who was adopted by the third uncle, without any special background and no special identity.

4. Aoko's life experience

Lu Jing and Qingzi, as the first male and female protagonists, are actually people with no foundation in the setting of this article. Neither of them will involve their families, they will just be drifting in the world.

See these questions for the time being, if you have any other questions, you can leave a message below.

Let's talk about the background setting of this article, many friends have reflected, although the time of this article is modern, but it looks like ancient times.

The structure of this is divided into secular and extraordinary. The characters written in this article basically belong to the outside world, including the Yin Patrol People, Shumen, Kunlun Mansion, evil spirits, grievances, etc., all of which are counted as outside the world.

And those commoners, who live in the city and the countryside, go to school, do business, and work normally, are counted as ordinary people.

For these sorcerers, they are actually a different world from the world. There is no such thing as pure right or wrong, good or evil.

It's like as a commoner, if he sees a man kill a cow, he doesn't think it's evil. When he sees a man kill a man, he will think it's evil. Because it's his kind.

But like Sect Master Ru, Master Qingzi, the sluts in the tomb of Xuannu, and even the leaders of various sects, in their eyes, a secular commoner is not much different from a cow.

It's a different pattern, they want stability in the whole world. As for the grievances, the spirits, the commoners, or the beasts, they are all equal in their eyes.

Heaven and earth are unkind, and all things are regarded as dogs. Therefore, there is no good or evil in the world, only positions. As a Yin Patrolman, my first position is to protect the stability of the world. The same is true as a person in the sect. There is no essential difference between a living person and a grievance or a spirit.

In fact, until now, I don't care much about the plot or anything, but these characters remain in my heart. Overall, I am most satisfied with the portrayal of the characters in the book.

In addition, the emotional description of this book is more introverted, and I once saw a reader on QQ reading who said: This author can't write feelings at all.

Haha, okay.

The most perfect structure of the Yin Patrol itself should be the end of the turmoil in the fifth volume.

The later Yin Affair chapter is an expansion of the plot, originally like a yin patrol, which can be written infinitely, depending on how these characters deal with supernatural events. is like a unit drama, a case by case, in itself, can never end.

Written to today, it's been updated for 212 days in a row, and I'm really tired, so the Yin Patrol will come to an end for the time being. It's a pity that many of my friends' roles haven't been in yet. Mainly because the characters in this novel are relatively close, and there are fewer characters in the branches.

In addition, some places may be a little obscure, and if you still don't understand, you can leave a message below. Thank you all for your companionship along the way.