Qin Xiao died the most embarrassing death in history — hit by a truck while running for his life from nothing in particular — and woke up inside a novel he had already read.
Not just any novel. *The Divine Doctor Dragon King and the Domineering Son-in-Law* — the single most brain-dead piece of urban fiction ever committed to paper. A story where a godlike doctor hides behind the mask of a humiliated husband, slapping the faces of every arrogant noble family fool who crosses him, collecting beautiful women the way other men collect regrets, and building an empire on the backs of every so-called villain who was stupid enough to stand in his way.
Qin Xiao knows every word of it.
He also knows something that should have given him comfort — he didn't transmigrate as the villain. He transmigrated as a side character. A noble family second son. Wealthy, handsome, largely irrelevant to the plot.
The problem?
His brother is the villain.
Qin Lin — cold-blooded CEO, domineering patriarch of the Qin family, the most powerful man in Jingyue City by every conventional measure — is scripted to be systematically dismantled. His pride shattered. His judgment corrupted. His empire handed, piece by piece, to the very man who humiliates him. Until the great Qin Lin is nothing but the Dragon King's loyal, broken lackey.
Qin Xiao has read that ending. He is not going to let it happen.
*Ding~ [Hello Host. The Destiny Assistance System is here to serve you wholeheartedly.]*
The rules are simple. The Dragon King — Chu Feng — has a protagonist's halo. It bends reality around him. Makes intelligent people stupid, makes impossible things happen, delivers women, victories, and destiny points straight to his door like the universe itself is running his errands. Every crisis he solves. Every woman who falls for him. Every face he slaps. That's not luck. That's narrative gravity — and it has a source.
Steal it.
Every heroine Chu Feng was supposed to rescue? Qin Xiao gets there first. Every moment of scripted triumph? Already claimed. Every destiny point the protagonist was promised? Transferred — with interest — to the man who read the ending and decided to write a better one.
What follows is not a war. Wars are loud, and loud men get face-slapped in this genre.
What follows is a surgical replacement operation conducted with complete information, perfect emotional regulation, and the specific, devastating calm of a man who finds the whole situation genuinely hilarious. While Chu Feng's halo bends the world toward his victories, Qin Xiao keeps arriving at those victories first — solving crises no one told him about, knowing secrets no one shared, positioning himself at the center of every moment the Dragon King was supposed to own.
One stolen destiny point at a time. One redirected woman at a time. One publicly humiliated protagonist at a time.
The Dragon King is still dangerous. The story engine is still running. And somewhere above the noble family tier, an ancient organization is starting to notice that their chosen protagonist's wins keep arriving already empty.
But Qin Xiao has already read what comes next.
He just hasn't decided whether to follow the script — or write something the author never saw coming.
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*The protagonist had the halo. The women. The destiny. The empire.*
*He had it all written down, guaranteed, delivered.*
*Qin Xiao had something better.*
***He'd already read the book.***