>"Previously, all I'd think about after going home is doing drugs. Now, all my thoughts have to do with Chinese novels." Cazad has read some 15 web series over three different websites like WuxiaWorld.com, and has no regrets.
>"Even though they are just as addictive as drugs, online Chinese novels won't harm your health."
>Cazad firmly believes that the magical world depicted in the fantasy novel is real, and that superhuman feats in the books like transforming into dragons is something that normal people can do.
>"Through practice, people can see energy," Cazad explained to the China Southern Weekly. "At a high enough level, you can see different ripples of colors, thereby allowing you to tell when someone is lying, or in love."
>"I want to become one of the people in a mysterious fantasy novel," Cazad has said.
http://www.thebeijinger.com/blog/2017/04/05/us-man-credits-chinese-web-novels-curing-his-addiction-drugs
>>9339010
So, it's autism then.
Is this satire?
>>9339045
Wait, they brought that character back through some bullshit magic
>>9339010
Some spanish guy in the early baroque should write a novel about this
>>9339307
As a zombie who later died again.
>thinly veiled wuxiaworld shill
Janny!