El Sistema De Autosalvacion Del Villano Escoria... -

Hating your own novel’s protagonist has never been this hilarious—or this tragic.

The system (a snarky, video-game-like interface) forces him to follow the plot, but he tries to cheat. Instead of abusing the protagonist, he… accidentally shows him basic kindness. Instead of betraying him, he gives him a fan.

If you’ve ever been a fan of transmigration stories, villain redemption arcs, or just watching a deeply flawed man try to gaslight his way to survival, boy, do I have a recommendation for you. El sistema de autosalvacion del Villano Escoria...

However—and this is where Mo Xiang Tong Xiu excels—Shen Yuan is still kind of a scumbag. He’s arrogant, hypocritical, and emotionally constipated. He views Luo Binghe’s trauma as "plot events" rather than real pain. He lies pathologically.

Here’s a blog post draft about El sistema de autosalvación del Villano Escoria (assuming you mean the web novel/light novel genre piece, often translated as The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu). If you meant a different work, let me know, but this is the most likely title. Why “The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System” is the Ultimate Meta-Drama You Didn’t Know You Needed Hating your own novel’s protagonist has never been

In the original story, Shen Qingqiu is a jealous, cruel teacher who abuses the protagonist, Luo Binghe, until Luo Binghe inevitably returns from hell to torture him to death. Brutally.

So, Shen Yuan’s new mission isn't heroic. It’s simple: Instead of betraying him, he gives him a fan

The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System (SVSSS) by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu is often called the “unhinged middle child” of her bibliography. Sandwiched between the political epic Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation and the cosmic romance Heaven Official’s Blessing , SVSSS is smaller in scale but arguably sharper in its satire.