Well, the ancient writers (typically from 80-90s) used to just dump whatever they wanted. They wrote the most annoying characters, and wrote the longest, most boring descriptions about the place the characters were on. And you know what? People still love it

. You cannot expect most audiences to hook up on your story from the start, really. The key to hooking a reader is a "question" that needs to be "answered," no matter how unsatisfying it may be in the end.
For example, this:
authors.romancereads.site
Half of the stuff doesn't even make sense, but people still read it through. Do you know why? Cuz it's bullshit. And people looooove asspulls, believe it or not. They love tragedies and questions that leaves them on edge.
A author must know how to manipulate these facts to their advantage.
That's it, not that deep. A powerful opening chapter maybe important, but it's not an ultimate rule

. People will continue reading your book if you give them something to be curious about—it's like giving monkeys a new toy; they will curiously look around it, trying to figure it out. We humans are like that, too.
Just do what you like, sprinkle some "toys" and

you are done~ You can improve your writing as the plot progresses like this.
Hope this helps.
—sincerely,
Asspull master Success0906~
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