Rebirth: Bringing a Golden Finger to Farm

Ordinary office worker Tang Xiaoxiao was unexpectedly reborn, returning to ten years ago when she had just graduated from college and had not yet been worn down by society.

Armed with a huge ...

Chapter 51: The Aftermath of the Gathering (shuhaige.net)

After turning on the computer and logging into the game, I immediately saw a barrage of private messages. When I opened them, I found that almost all of them were messages from players in my guild. Several of them were talking about the same thing. It turned out that after the people who attended the party went home, someone posted Liu Li's name on the game forum.

Tang Xiaoxiao opened the forum homepage, and the first thing she saw was a post highlighted in red, prominently displayed in the most conspicuous position.

[Shocking! The game's big spender is actually... in real life...]

Upon seeing this title, Tang Xiaoxiao's lips twitched slightly.

Who came up with this? They really know how to grab attention. It's a shame they didn't become a reporter at UC.

After clicking into the post and quickly browsing through it, Tang Xiaoxiao couldn't help but laugh.

The post used exaggerated language to describe in detail how a certain fake guru surnamed Liu first pretended to be a rich man and claimed to cover all the expenses for his group's offline gatherings. However, upon meeting, he revealed his lecherous nature, tried to harass the goddess, and then, overestimating his abilities, drank too much liquor and ended up in the hospital. Finally, he reneged on his promise and refused to pay the bill.

They did take a group photo on the first day of their gathering, and the poster also posted a cropped headshot of Liu Li, along with his in-game character ID, essentially exposing Liu Li completely online. Currently, China lacks clear legislation regarding the arbitrary exposure of others' personal information online, so while the poster's actions are somewhat unethical, it's difficult to hold them accountable.

The poster was anonymous, and he obviously knew that he was going to offend people completely by doing this, so he didn't dare to actually show up. There were more than 30 people attending the party, so even if Liu Li saw the post and was furious and wanted to retaliate, it would be difficult to find out who posted it.

However, since Liu Li mainly offended Tang Xiaoxiao, many people speculated that Tang Xiaoxiao might have been responsible. This suspicion is quite normal, since she is the prime suspect. She was the only one who directly clashed with Liu Li, and logically, she should be the one who hates Liu Li the most.

I wonder if the person who posted this thought of this.

Tang Xiaoxiao wasn't afraid of Liu Li's retaliation, but she couldn't tolerate others making wild guesses about her. She contacted a college classmate who was a hacker enthusiast. Although his skills weren't particularly strong, checking IP addresses was still a piece of cake for him.

Soon after, Tang Xiaoxiao posted a thread using her own account, showing the IP address of the original post. It was from another city more than 100 kilometers away from D City, and the post was made at around 7 pm yesterday. At that time, she was on the highway. She took photos of the toll booths at the two highway toll stations between D City and A City and uploaded them, which was enough to prove that she was driving on the highway when the post was published.

Aside from a few pictures of evidence, Tang Xiaoxiao's post didn't say anything else, but everyone understood what she meant.

I already said it couldn't have been my goddess who did it; she wouldn't stoop to posting anonymously.

I'm really curious about what the expert looks like.

----Friends who attended the party, could someone kindly post a group photo?

I have it. Add me on QQ if you want to see it.

The forum was buzzing with discussion, but once the topic shifted away from her, Tang Xiaoxiao closed the forum and stopped paying attention. Liu Li had already been removed from the gang, and Tang Xiaoxiao had already taught him a lesson; she'd vented her anger, so there was no need to care about him anymore.

What she didn't know was that Liu Li's bad luck hadn't dissipated yet.