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Ask a senior bookworm to recommend a novel similar to Katu, thank you!
Although I dare not say senior, I will say what I have seen.

Katu is understood as YY, which is not serious, illogical and limited.

Then first of all, I recommend the two I am chasing.

Well, I admit I'm trying to catch up, so I want others to work together, so I can leave it alone. )

Although there are still many tricky "Strangers", I feel almost finished.

I can see a lot of thoughts about the definition of civilization, the boundary of morality and the meaning of life.

There is also the Great Sage, which is serialized and getting higher and higher.

The protagonist is really the kind of upgraded acrobatics that hit the Universiade, but since I took it out, I naturally want to see it.

Then it's over

You can see the joy of life passing through the ancient head before it becomes tricky.

It's interesting to write a tricky article. Although the materials are all bad, such as crossing the prince, it doesn't pay attention to the so-called yy point. For example, it doesn't describe how the protagonist is brilliant, and others are surprised by nature. It pays more attention to interpersonal relationships and the cause and effect of things, which makes people feel more coherent and natural.

If you want to see it, the previous Snake Swallow Whale, Rebirth into a Demon and Immortal Golden Body are also good. His ideas have always been interesting and can be well expressed in his works, such as going back to the causal cycle in the past, and the protagonist is not a person or something.

Jing Ke's "Paradise for Humanity" has created a very complete and grand system, and even the world outlook is worthy of being called the founder.

Sotheby's The Magician's Tale is a classic dnd system and the best embodiment of a powerful mage who never needs to speak loudly.

Li's Devil's Hand seems to be just an upgraded novel, but the first three volumes are all good, and there is a feeling that the key is the embodiment of intelligence. There are no such stupid characters, although there are still some bugs, but it is very good.

It's a bit like The Dead Designer (unfinished).

And Salem's "The Secret" and "Twilight of the Gods". The former is about artificial intelligence in the human brain, and the latter is about a protagonist who was abandoned because of genetic defects at that time, both of which are relatively early works.

The only infinite flow I can see in the resurrected ace evolution is probably because the protagonist is an intellectual, so I can't see Zheng Fried.

The disaster caused by beans, "Little Fairy Poison", is easier and harder to jump out of fairy tales like Yuan Ying and then Dan.

I also forgot the Earthmaster and Lingshan written by a son of Xu, and you will have a feeling of cultivating immortals.

His description of cultivating immortals is very specific, which makes people feel understood and ignorant, and attaches great importance to describing the relationship between people.

His other articles are also very good. I've read half of Desire, but I haven't seen the rest, so the reason why I don't say I haven't seen it is probably that I don't like the role of Wind Childe very much.

I can't think of anything else, that's all.