You know, the parents of China people born between 1975 and 1985 have basically experienced the most "bitter" period in China, either the so-called urban educated youth who lost precious educational opportunities or the poor children who lived a poor middle-class life in the countryside. In other words, this generation of parents have not laid a good material foundation for their children. It's no use fighting for dad.
However, the post-90s generation is different: their parents are mostly post-60s or even post-70s, who have caught up with the spring breeze of reform and opening up since childhood, and are basically the biggest beneficiaries of China's growth bonus in the past 30 years, so they have the conditions to create a more free and relaxed growth environment for their children. To some extent, the post-90s generation in China is closer to the post-80s generation in the United States, that is, Zuckerberg's generation: parents are middle-class and have no worries about food and clothing, and children can try their dreams and make mistakes relatively inexplicably.
If Li Xiang, Chen Ou and Yu Dunde are "special cases" coming out of the post-80s generation, then in the next 10 year, China's post-90s generation will appear in people's field of vision as a group rather than as a case. Of course, their road to success will be very different from their predecessors!