share time: 2025-12-04 12:32:04
In the famine-stricken 1960s, three-year-old Lin Xiaoman huddled with her parents and siblings in a broken kiln, starving so much she chewed tree bark every day. Until she awakened the “Famine-Year Koi System”—wild rabbit popped up where she touched the weeds, sweet water gushed from the dry well she pointed at, even her tears turned into wild eggs. The Lin family, once mocked as “poor ghosts,” not only filled their stomachs but also helped villagers survive thanks to Xiaoman’s “miracles.” But when someone tried to take her away as a “living bodhisattva,” her parents held her tight: “Our kid isn’t a god—she’s our whole life.” The five of them stuck together, growing the warmest flower in the famine, even the system sighed secretly: “Turns out the most powerful koi is a family’s love.”
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