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As Tian Xiaoxi's best friend, her phone vibrated while watching the live broadcast.

[The comic "Monster City" you are following has been updated to Chapter 7...]

Updated?

Song Yaoyao leaned back in her chair, took out her phone and clicked on episode 7. She couldn't help but mutter: "Didn't we agree to leave blank pages and stop updating?"

"As expected, Tian Xiaoxi still can't let go of this comic."

Open at one point.

When she saw the comic content, the water in her mouth almost spurted out.

What are you doing?

An NPC is drawing comics seven days a week?

Can such a boring thing be considered a plot?

And this painting skill...

An extremely scrawled simple drawing, with the glasses just painted in a circle.

You can see his hard work in every line, but you can also see his hands shaking.

Each stroke is serious and sad.

It's just pure line drawing without any skills.

If you look at it as a simple drawing, it is quite interesting.

But if you read it as a comic...

That would be a disaster.

Song Yaoyao was puzzled.

Although Tian Xiaoxi's sensitivity to the subject matter is a bit poor, his painting skills are not that bad.

"What is this guy doing?"

"Shui Quanqin?"

The perfect attendance for comics requires one chapter to be updated every week.

There are requirements for the length and plot of an episode. If the episode is spammy and the plot fails to connect, it will be judged as a lack of attendance.

Is Quanqin willing to do anything for Shui Quanqin?

You don’t draw the main plot, but you let the NPCs start drawing comics?

What's the difference between this and the novel where the big map is directly switched, the protagonist becomes the protagonist's son, grandson, or great-grandson, and a new map is opened again!

Just when she wanted to close the software.

Song Yaoyao noticed with sharp eyes that although the NPC named He Zhou used A4 paper to draw comics, he even carefully designed a cover.

Comparing that degree of sophistication with the sad line drawings drawn by a naive and zero-skilled person, one can fully imagine how serious he was on this cover.

It's actually a bit touching.

"The cover is quite nice."

"Chief Black Cat?"

The black and white cat face has slightly sloppy lines, but it can be seen that he is working hard to draw it.

At a glance, it looks like a handwritten newspaper with delicate scrawls.

I don’t know how I feel about it, but this slightly childish painting has an inexplicable appeal.

Especially in the entire gloomy style of "Monster City", it looks particularly upright and awe-inspiring.

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