No.
The character Lu Zhishen comes from the novel "Water Margin". Lu Zhishen is courageous when seeing justice, hates evil as much as enemies, helps those in need, has a clear sense of love and hate, is generous and generous. Brave and resourceful, bold and careful. Enthusiastic and straightforward, rough and strong, and both rough and rude. This passage in the article describes how he frightened the enemy, not his character. It should be a literary rhetoric method: exaggeration.
"Water Margin" is a chapter-style novel compiled by Shi Naian in the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties. It is listed as one of the four classic Chinese literary masterpieces. The book tells the story of the green forest heroes headed by Song Jiang, who were forced to live in the grass, grew and grew, until they were recruited by the imperial court, and conquered east and west. "Water Margin" is one of the earliest chapter novels written in vernacular Chinese in Chinese history.