After 3 Days Of Sleeping (Part 2)

However, as soon as he logged in, he was overwhelmed by a large number of "card-making invitations".

Seeing piles upon piles of these invitations, he looked bewildered.

Didn't they say that because of the original owner's declining card-making skills, not many people were coming to him for card-making anymore?

How come there are so many people looking for him now?

Or could it be that the star card he put up for sale on the RedEstelar Network was sold, so many returning customers had come to him?

With this thought in mind, Chun Ho-Jin checked his sales records.

It indeed showed that the star card he made had been sold, and he had received 90 Stellar Coins as payment.

But this doesn't make sense.

Even if there were returning customers, it's impossible for so many orders to come to him all at once, right?

This isn't right; something else must have happened.

However, when Chun Ho-Jin searched about it on the RedEstelar Network, he couldn't find any relevant information, so he had to give up for the time being and focus on the new card-making invitations that had come in.

In fact, it's not that Chun Ho-Jin couldn't find any relevant information.

It's because during the time when Chun Ho-Jin was still asleep, all the messages related to that post were deliberately deleted by someone with ulterior motives.

Initially, the deletion wasn't so thorough.

But after realizing the greater benefits and value behind those ten one-star star cards sold, both the Black Armored Raven Hunter Squad and the City Patrol Team began to pay attention to Chun Ho-Jin.

They didn't want other forces to notice Chun Ho-Jin's existence, so they spent a lot of money to clear up the traces on the RedEstelar Network even more thoroughly.

Therefore, when Chun Ho-Jin searched on the RedEstelar Network now, he naturally couldn't find any information about it at all.

However, regardless of why these customers came knocking on his door, the point is, it would be foolish not to make money when the opportunity arises.

Especially now that Chun Ho-Jin is particularly short of money and urgently needs a sum of money to solve his financial difficulties.

He's so broke that he can barely afford the cost of card making, let alone those blank star cards.

But as Chun Ho-Jin went through each card-making invitation, his brows furrowed tighter and tighter.

Eventually, he regretfully declined these invitations one by one, wondering if these customers were still looking for the original owner when he was a Level A Star Card Maker.

These card making invitations were too demanding and difficult!

Not to mention those with special card skill requirements, even just the requested star card levels were almost all above two-star star cards, with some even demanding three-star Star Cards or even higher.

While the payment was quite substantial, it felt like too much, almost as if they were giving it away for free, which made Chun Ho-Jin feel even more distressed.