Chapters: 81
Play Count: 3,343
Susan Grant dies in a car accident and wakes as Mrs. Holden. She helps Ethan Holden against William Holden but soon realizes her mistake after a setback. As Susan grows closer to William, family betrayal threatens their happiness. In the end, Susan reveals the truth, chooses love, and finds joy with William and their child.
Susan Grant dies in a car accident and wakes as Mrs. Holden. She helps Ethan Holden against William Holden but soon realizes her mistake after a setback. As Susan grows closer to William, family betrayal threatens their happiness. In the end, Susan reveals the truth, chooses love, and finds joy with William and their child.
Gangster CEO Charles Romanoff falls in love at first sight with Florence, the woman who saved his life. However, his domineering attempts to pursue her are repeatedly rejected. Determined to stop Florence from marrying Vaughn—a manipulative man with a dark past—Charles storms the wedding with his gang, publicly disrupts the ceremony, and forces her into a marriage with him. Post-wedding, Charles evolves into a fiercely protective husband, shielding Florence from harm. Over time, Florence begins to see beyond his rough exterior and gradually warms to his genuine devotion, unraveling an unexpected emotional bond between them.
The Duke family plotted to take Lorena Shaw's inheritance by murdering her father, Lennon. Unaware of their betrayal, Lennon left half of his fortune to the Dukes and arranged a marriage between Lorena and Cole Duke. However, the Dukes treated Lorena terribly, pushing her to leave in fury. Seeking both revenge and freedom, Lorena set her sights on Ethan Greer. She seduced him into bed, but soon regretted it and wanted to leave. Later, she found herself falling for Ethan.
Trapped as a villainess with three ruthless brothers, Sara Lowe vomits on CEO Blake, "accidentally" torches his hand, then beds elevator hottie Lennox — who's the mafia heir. Now she's juggling brothers' schemes, Blake's revenge, and the underworld king she seduced.
The male lead accidentally transmigrates into a short web drama as a lackey to villainess Seraphina Sterling—and gets a “Lackey System.” Completing tasks and slapping the Chosen One earns him rewards. But Seraphina, now reborn, remembers dying at the hands of those so-called heroes—and this time, she’s staying far away.
In the Cultivators' Realm, sects proliferate in shifting rivalries. The Freewind Sect commands reverence, the Nightshade wields shadowed might, the Valley of the Sage masks sinister rot, and the Alliance of Immortals hoards secrets. Amidst this turmoil, the Zhuyu Clan's unique spiritual constitution sparks lethal covetousness.
Matthew Sterling wakes as the villain in an unfinished warlord novel and kidnaps Sophia Rain. To survive the all-powerful hero, he uses the Core system, gaining skills by provoking the heroine's negative emotions. Yet, their indifference leaves him frustrated and unrewarded. Can a villain thrive when no one plays along?
Francesca Shaw could not believe her terrible luck. One minute, she complained about her struggling acting career, forced to star in a dreadful TV show despite being an award-winning actress; the next, she found herself electrocuted and inexplicably transmigrated into that very show. And now, Francesca has become a frustrated actress. Who could blame her, though? She was, after all, guaranteed a huge salary for her role in the TV show. But now she had to do it for free.
Cindy Pine, chosen by the transmigration system after an accident, became the cannon fodder for female leads in novels. As she traveled through various worlds to save the antagonists, she never expected each antagonist—whether a moody, impoverished student or a restrained scion—to bear a striking resemblance to her original fiancé.
Charlotte White, a modern office lady, enters the melodramatic novel she mocked, and becomes its suffering heroine. She faces harmful love, a scheming stepsister, and ignorant parents, but she rejects victimhood. She bravely fights back and enjoys her revenge, yet she finds escaping absolute power is much harder than she thinks.