As in the title, take a day off, and the high-intensity update last month has guaranteed the normal update during the Chinese New Year, so give yourself a vacation today, take a day off, and watch the TV series version of the three-body problem.
I saw the novel serialized in the science fiction world as early as 2000. At that time, I thought the first part of the Three-Body Problem was actually quite ordinary. After all, the layout was really small, and it involved the story of that decade. This novel has the meaning of other scar literature that occupies the main body in bookstores. I thought I hated it and didn't like it at the time, but I didn't expect that the follow-up Three-Body Trilogy exceeded my imagination as a science fiction fan.
I didn't see it at the time, but later I saw a metaphorical explanation about the three-body problem on the Internet, and then I realized that the three-body people in Liu's eyes originally alluded to the American people on the other side of the ocean.
But when it comes to the story of Luo Ji's struggle with the Trisolarans in the second part, it gave me the same feeling of infinite horror as the first time I watched it in high school. It was a feeling of trembling like an electric shock all over the body, all done in one go. Although the final ending seems to be relatively peaceful in the dark forest deterrence, when I was in college at the beginning, I already liked to read various military magazines and books on international politics, and realized that in the calmness of the uneven strength of the two, so The hidden danger and the inevitable disaster ending.
The third story about Cheng Xin and Yun Tianming is actually quite good, especially the three fairy tales in the latter part of the story allude to the things that human beings are about to encounter, and there is no repeated use of light particle strikes at the end, but innovative He created the conceptual weapon of the two-way foil, which made me hooked at the time.