Such as the title"peers are not only enemies, but also the best teachers". It also starts from the animation of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. The unique fantasy animation tells the battle story of a group of people with special abilities. Needless to say, it has been out in the fourth quarter.
In the season of"JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: the Gold wind", the protagonist becomes Jobana, whose special ability doubles"gold Experience"to give life to objects. It doesn't matter what ability it is. Just watch the animation. What is important is the unique feeling of Dong Lingjun when he saw joruno's growth process of using this skill.
The 17th word is baby face. Joruno meets his rival baby face. His ability is to turn objects into other objects. Through this skill, he easily turns the body of male No. 2 bugalati into other objects. The wise joruno quickly figured out the essence of the baby face's ability, which was very similar to his own golden experience - it was empowering objects to change their characters. It turns out that our skill can still be used like this. He turns other objects into stolen organs and confronts the baby face in a complete posture.
Why do you feel so much about this sentence, because it adds a more reliable constraint to the common sentence"the stronger the opponent, the faster the growth"--"peers with similar strength are both your enemy and your best teacher".
The strength is equal. I don't have much explanation. See the old article on the principle of Goldilocks - Wukong's boss is only a little better than him every time. This is not what Niaoshan Ming takes for granted. If the strength doesn't want to be, it either has no exercise value (except for the little brother), or the protagonist will be killed. In the second sentence, joruno and male No. 2 bugalati had a PK. In the fierce battle, joruno found that his golden experience could also make the other party's feelings go wild. Joruno's awareness of his ability has improved, but does this PK improve Bugatti? I didn't feel it. Therefore, equal strength is only a prerequisite.
Peers are more conducive to self-improvement. Why not be peers?
Because of their skills and routines, they are the easiest to learn and easier to spark when fighting. As the saying goes, it's hard to learn from each other when fighting with a knife and a gun. The PK of the ice and snow department and the flame department are the same. It's not easy to learn new things except winning and losing. The skills of moves are almost the same, but people are different. The strengths of opponents are particularly easy to learn. For example, our clever joruno is a little transparent, and the application scope and power of gold experience have risen to a higher level. He has never thought of this usage before. Against the"peers"of baby face, joruno improved. I think baby face also improved, but it's a pity that he died.
I chatted about donglingjun's personal feelings. If you want to improve, you should choose the right opponent.
In addition, there is a feeling that it is generally the male protagonist who meets these most suitable opponents. They can improve and upgrade. Is it because their opponents make them grow, or is the pure aura of the protagonist favored by the author. It really needs a big question mark.
Joruno competed with baby face. He said:"this may be fate, or is there a gravitational attraction between similar double messengers that urges you and me to meet". Get a cheap summary, ha ha ha.
Routine benefits: each protagonist's peak is driven by a variety of conditions and reasons. A good opponent is one of them, the hero's aura is one of God's care, character is one of them, and teammates are one of them. The more factors we find, the more we grow. Those characters are not our opponents, but also teachers with learning value.