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Wealthy Chinese boy who excels in key exam hopes hard work will help him erase 'rich boy' label

An 18-year-old Chinese student, mocked for being a “spoiled rich boy” after arriving at his university entrance exam in a Mercedes Maybach, has surprised skeptics by getting top marks.

Zhu Yetian, a graduate of Hangzhou No. 2 High School in East China's Zhejiang Province, was nicknamed “Young Master of Maybach” after a video of his father dropping him off in the luxury car went viral viral online.

He passed the grueling university entrance exam, known as the gaokao in China, and scored 700 out of 750, a score high enough to allow him to be enrolled in one of the country's top universities, Chao News reported.

After Zhu's results were released, Chinese social media was abuzz with comments about his successful family background and academic excellence.

“With such a wealthy family, why does he bother taking the gaokao?” one person asked on Baidu.

Zhu Yetian performed so well on the exam that he was admitted to a prestigious university. Photo: Douyin

“The gods treat him too well. His family is rich and his academic results are amazing,” said another.

His grandfather, Zhu Bingren, is a famous master of bronze sculpture whose 100 selected works are expected to be exhibited this month at the National Museum of China in Beijing.

The 80-year-old artist is famous for applying bronze to the exterior of Hangzhou's historic Leifeng Pagoda during its restoration two decades ago.

His son, the boy's father, Zhu Junmin, is also an accomplished bronze craftsman and successful entrepreneur.

Young Zhu was always an excellent student, the report said.

According to his grandfather, the boy is very disciplined and gave up his hobby of playing mobile games over the past three years to really focus on his studies.

Zhu junior said he chose to endure the hardships of the difficult gaokao exam because his dream is to attend Peking University and passing the exam is the only way.

He excels in several subjects and even won a championship at the National Chemistry Olympics last year.

“When I started learning chemistry, I needed to recite a lot of things. But later I realized that this subject required logic, reasoning and imagination. I found it more and more fun to study chemistry,” he said.

Its ambition is to undertake scientific research on new materials.

His father wrote on Weibo that the boy was reading a textbook for a university program at 8 a.m. on June 11.

Zhu Junior's father says his son works hard and doesn't deserve the “rich boy” taunts he received. Photo: Xinhua

“They only see a ‘Young Master of Maybach,’ but I know how hard you studied,” his father said.

Zhu junior said he did not like the new nickname because of its negative connotation of displaying wealth.

“The stereotype of children from rich families is that they are ignorant, incompetent, flamboyant and spendthrift.

“However, many of my classmates also come from wealthy families, but they are pragmatic, low-key, humble and polite. I often remind myself to learn from them,” he said.

“I hope to get rid of the label of just being the son of a rich family through my hard work,” he added.

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