JosephRodriguez
Okay, the whole abandoned-in-Wolf-Mountain backstory is dark. Someone deliberately threw a three-year-old into a wolf den to die. That's not just "we don't want a girl" - that's straight up attempted murder. I really hope the story revisits this later because I need to know who those people were and why they did it. The mystery is a strong hook. Lin Xiaoxiao having no memories of the original body is a bit convenient but necessary for the plot.
The disguise training detail – how assassins learn to become different people – adds nice depth. The bit about hiding a duck leg in his chest while playing a beggar felt real and funny. It's those small touches that make the world feel lived-in. Also, the saying "if the first strike misses, flee a thousand miles" is a classic trope executed well here.
The fact that Lin Du was an emotional blogger in her past life adds so much context to her behavior. She’s spent years analyzing people’s toxic relationships, so she knows exactly how to spot manipulation and counter it. That background makes her role as a love-brain saver feel natural, not forced. It’s a clever way to give her expertise without it feeling like an info-dump.
