[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"origin-wizard-war-at-hogwarts":3,"chapter-wizard-war-at-hogwarts-wizard-war-at-hogwarts-chapter-527":6},{"origin":4,"title":5},"chinese","Wizard War at Hogwarts",{"chapter":7,"nextChapterSlug":19,"prevChapterSlug":20,"totalChapters":21,"novelImage":22},{"id":8,"novel_id":9,"title":10,"slug":11,"index":12,"content":13,"wordcount":14,"created_at":15,"updated_at":15,"volume":16,"translator":17,"content_hash":18},2358500,4612,"Chapter 527: Summary of Volume Seven","wizard-war-at-hogwarts-chapter-527",527,"\u003Cp>The seventh volume is tentatively titled \"Harry Potter and the Fallen Empire,\" \"Harry Potter and the Fallen Empire\"; \"Fallen Empire\" admits multiple interpretations: one is the literal meaning, referring directly to the Celestial Dynasty in the story; the other is a metaphorical reading, interpreting it as the declining British Empire.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Originally, the seventh volume could have delved into extensive international intrigue and power struggles, but the author, overwhelmed mentally and fearing censorship, drastically accelerated the Celestial Dynasty’s awakening and rise, leaping nineteen years forward immediately after completing Harry’s seventh year, leaving the global upheavals to unfold during that time span.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The fates and experiences of some characters from Harry’s era will be gradually revealed in the eighth volume.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>First, a brief recap of the Celestial Dynasty: in the story, it functions as a mysterious observer, awakened by a domestic minority faction’s provocation of foreign invasion, yet even after victory, it refrains from expansion as a benevolent intervener. Ultimately, Ge Xuan, through advanced magical refinement, unlocked the chain of cosmic creation events (known: time turners can return to the past—speculation: altering the past may enter a parallel world—analyzing the time turner’s mechanism can create parallel worlds—using rituals to expand scope, transporting the entire nation into a parallel world), thus permanently leaving this world; simultaneously, the lunar base, originally part of the Seed Project, automatically became the new, and more strictly fitting, Fallen Empire. This was the predetermined narrative direction and ending, designed to preserve the Celestial Dynasty’s dignity and power while minimizing its interference with the main plot.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Second, regarding the British Empire itself—this is also Hermione’s growth arc. After enduring emotional setbacks and refocusing her energy on grand narratives, she fully deployed her intellect to become the second Minister for Magic to ascend to Prime Minister; she then used the magical world to incite international turbulence, ultimately triggering the dissolution of the United States Federation, and through shrewd calculation (or conspiracy), seized the moment when Yanayev lay dying and Su Fang was in chaos, reconstituting the English-speaking Alliance and reconsolidating resources to emerge as a new Cold War power—the Cold War had never ended, but Great Britain had returned to its zenith, realizing the strategic vision she had already conceived during her seventh year, leveraging the magical world’s unique advantages.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Then there is Donald Fontroy and Ge Xuan’s theory of magical manifestation, which slightly breaks the fourth wall: simply put, if a concept proposed by characters within the book is one readers delight in, it can be easily realized, because the author stands on their side. From this perspective, introducing a floating city into Harry Potter’s magical world is an appealing setting and thus receives support; introducing the Trisolarans is a foolish idea and therefore impossible. Yet to the characters themselves, they do not comprehend they inhabit a novel bound by narrative logic—so Donald genuinely fears the Trisolarans might appear, though in reality, they never could.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Meanwhile, Ge Xuan’s prototype is drawn from a real-life friend of the author, granting him an innate narrative-layer status—he can easily evade the author’s descriptions and choose his own open-ended conclusion. He likely guessed the Trisolarans could never appear in a Harry Potter novel, yet he left a contingency: if the author truly went mad and wrote the Trisolarans, then Cui Ge might still transform into Ultraman Tregear, as he mentioned in Chapter 59 as his “reference answer.” But in truth, the author did not go mad, so the Trisolarans were merely a deception designed to cage Donald.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Of course, Donald’s character was conceived from the story’s opening as a satire of fanfiction tropes obsessed with courting Hermione; thus, his narrative arrangements often transcend the fourth wall—leveraging canon information gaps, external work information gaps, and now, a gap in narrative logic. His increasing elusiveness may well be a form of personal growth.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Finally, a brief introduction to the characters to be featured in the eighth volume (aligned with the Fantastic Beasts films): Benjamin Tennison is an original character; to foreshadow him, his father Karl Tennison was introduced in the sixth year. Karl, Nicolai, and two minor background figures form a quartet serving as Harry’s usable subordinates, analogous to Dumbledore and the Order of the Phoenix.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Aside from him, all other characters in the eighth volume are either descendants of main characters or still adhere to the faction classification principles mentioned in the prologue.\u003C\u002Fp>",729,"2026-06-21T04:54:29.438Z",1,"Qwen3-Next 80B","7bd1092a875ee8a30ffed254c51614557585d60dd1a493c690ab9d6ce593ff6e","wizard-war-at-hogwarts-chapter-528","wizard-war-at-hogwarts-chapter-526",528,"https:\u002F\u002Fnovelzhen.com\u002Fimages\u002Fcovers\u002Fwizard-war-at-hogwarts-cover.jpg"]