Report Me for Selling Fake Medicine? I'm Not Selling Anymore, So Why are You Crying? - Reviews

Report Me for Selling Fake Medicine? I'm Not Selling Anymore, So Why are You Crying?
+Add to Custom List
Sort
Add review
... Read More
Cheng Ming keeping the returned medicine for himself is the darkest touch. He is literally hoarding the cure that people are throwing away out of greed. The symbolism is perfect. They are discarding their health and he is building an arsenal for his own survival and eventual revenge.
... Read More
The dialogue between Old Jin and Chen Dongji at Huaming headquarters is painful to read. They handed over the medicine and were dismissed like trash. “You can go back and wait for news.” The disrespect is obvious but the irony is they treated Cheng Ming the exact same way. Karma is patient.
... Read More
This is a solid, addictive read so far. The first act arcs perfectly into the second. The emotional hook of the betrayal is strong enough to carry the setup into the corporate revenge arc. I am fully on board for Cheng Ming’s rise. Let him cook.
... Read More
The satisfaction of the refund scene is through the roof. Watching the scammer patient get shut down, the auntie accept her partial refund. Every small victory feels earned because we saw Cheng Ming get betrayed first. The catharsis is perfectly timed.
... Read More
The sack of cash is a great detail. It makes the system feel tangible. No digital credits, just pure physical money. This explains why Cheng Ming hasn’t bought a house yet. The logistics of laundering system cash might actually become a fun subplot later.
... Read More
The setting of Haicheng is generic but the contrast between the old rented house and the billion-dollar pharmaceutical company is strong. Classic David vs Goliath setup. Everything hinges on this location contrast making the underdog story feel real.
... Read More
Wen Yilin accepting the job despite knowing it’s a shell company shows she is either very desperate or very brave. Her “Professional Pharmacist” degree might actually become crucial later when the company needs to pass regulatory inspections. A smart hire hidden in a chaotic decision.
... Read More
The way Cheng Ming just hires Wen Yilin on the spot feels very desperate. “It’s a startup anyway. I don’t have anyone more suitable right now.” Brutal honesty. He is treating people like assets to complete the system mission and I am curious if this will backfire on him later.
... Read More
The dramatic irony is agonizing. The police, the public, the patients all think the medicine is fake. But the reader *knows* it’s the best cure in the world. Watching them throw away their only chance at survival while celebrating the arrest is painful in the best way.
... Read More
“If Bai Ruolan knew…” This tiny throwaway line implies a massive painful backstory. Cheng Ming has a history of being abandoned. This isn’t his first heartbreak. The fact that he still tries to help people despite this history makes his resilience deeply tragic and admirable.
... Read More
I appreciate that Cheng Ming isn’t purely good. He charged them ten thousand yuan. He has millions saved in his account. He’s not a saint, he’s a businessman with a golden heart. The betrayal is turning that gold into cold iron and it makes his character arc feel earned.
... Read More
The pacing is incredible so far. We go from arrest to company setup in like three chapters. Every single scene serves either the plot progression or Cheng Ming’s emotional hardening. No filler. I really hope it maintains this energy through the corporate battle arc.

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to leave comments. or