I want to ride the wind.

Classic lines of juvenile songs: I want to ride the wind to the north, and the snow falls like a seat. I'm going to swim east by boat and let the fairy stand in the wind. I want to walk thousands of miles in the clouds, the temple is full of dragons, and the top of Kunlun Mountain is bathed in sunshine. The sea put all your eggs in one basket to see the green hills, and the Changfeng Wan Li Yan returned, and no one returned.

This is a poem that came from an unintentional mouth. In fact, this poem summarizes the whole core of animation. When you inadvertently say this poem in the moonlight, plus everyone's picture, it feels overwhelming. The most exciting thing is the picture of accidentally jumping down, just like a hero's demeanor. The most interesting thing is the boss's sentence: "At this moment, you finally look like a master." This sentence just fell, unintentionally.

It was really sad when I accidentally knew it, but how sweet it was at that time and how cruel it was at the moment I left. In fact, he just wanted to go back to the small temple, the unintentional home, so he left a tear at the moment of leaving, but this time he unintentionally said this poem, and the two feelings were completely different. Once chic in the moonlight, now it is full of helplessness! Many poems in juvenile songs have Zen meaning.

Introduction of "Youth Song";

Lei Wuji, a fledgling young chivalrous man, went to Xue Yue, the largest city in the Jianghu, and mistakenly entered Shero Villa on the way. The first time I was brave, I was investigated and compensated for smashing the boss's bleak inn. In desperation, I took the bleak to Xue Yuecheng to borrow money to pay off my debts. On the way, I happened to meet Tang Lian, a disciple of Xueyuecheng who escorted the golden coffin. Inadvertently, she was involved in a huge Jianghu battle, even involving a royal secret that had been hidden for many years.

A few young chivalrous men with strange life experiences and heroic spirit are entangled all the way. Pulled by invisible clues, they gradually evolved from ignorance into young heroes and sang their own chivalrous songs in the lingering feelings of morality, brotherhood, love and hate.