She was just out having a meal when — poof — she disappeared.
When Ning Xiyue opened her eyes again, she had already transmigrated into the 1970s — and worse, she was now a minor cannon-fodder character in a “lucky mascot + everyone dotes on the heroine” era novel, a love-brained side character whose only purpose was to deliver resources and equipment to the female lead.
Ning Xiyue declares: “No way! I refuse to be a love-brain.”
She will tear apart scumbag men and b*tchy women with her bare hands.
If someone takes what belongs to her — they’ll return it.
If someone eats what’s hers — they’ll spit it back out.
Did someone give away something that might become her future “golden finger” (cheat item)? She’ll snatch it back.
If the cheat isn’t useful to her? She’ll smash it to pieces with a brick rather than let anyone else benefit from it.
The scumbag man who harmed the original owner? She’ll kick him all the way to the desolate northwest.
And the “white lotus” cousin who conspired with him to kill the original owner — and who is supposedly the female lead? She’d better prepare to face Ning Xiyue’s wrath.
Later, Ning Xiyue obtained a golden finger of her own — a sign-in system where everything in the world could be signed in and acquired.
With this system, she happily went to the countryside as a “sent-down youth,” supporting rural development.
But once she arrived, she realized that the novel she had transmigrated into wasn’t so simple after all.
The scheming cousin isn’t the real female lead? There’s someone else who is?
Ning Xiyue says: “I don’t care who the female lead is. That white lotus cousin isn’t escaping — I’m still going to beat her up and torture her.”
As for the real heroine — why not just sit back, munch melon seeds, watch the drama unfold, and focus on building her own career?
Note: The male lead is mostly a background character and doesn’t appear much.