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#152 w/Records of Three Kingdoms 190-280

By: Kokusai-Tsushin

Type: Magazine

Product Line: Command Magazine w/Games (Japanese)

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Last Stocked on 12/13/2023

Product Info

Title
#152 w/Records of Three Kingdoms 190-280
Publisher
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2020
Pages
68
Dimensions
8.75x11.5x.5"
NKG Part #
2147924430
Type
Magazine
Age Range
12 Years and Up
# Players
2 - 4 Players
Game Length
180 Minutes

Description

From about 180 AD to about 280 AD, China was a period of war in which many heroes were active and disappeared. Among them, Cao Cao, Sun Quan, and Liu Bei, who emerged and expanded their power, founded Wei, Wu, and Shu, respectively. Later generations call this time the era of the Three Kingdoms, as they repeatedly clashed for continental hegemony. Eventually, Wei destroyed the Shu, Wei was destroyed by the Sima clan and became Jin, and then Wu was also destroyed by Jin, ending this era. The feats of the heroes who lived in this era have been handed down and still fascinate many people. If you become Cao Cao, Sun Quan, or Liu Bei, how will you fight, where will you establish your country, and what kind of heroes will fight for continental hegemony? And what kind of ending is waiting for us...

"Knights of Valor" is a game published in the Taiwanese game magazine "Senki", and is a work with the theme of Sangokushi, which is also popular in Japan. The game system reproduces the world of Sangokushi based on the system of "Taheiki" designed by Makoto Nakajima.


The first half and the second half of the story can be reproduced in two scenarios, and two bonus scenarios added after the announcement have been added in the Japanese version. A total of 4 scenarios are recorded, dealing with the period from the battle between Dong Zhuo and Dong Zhuo Union (playable by 2 to 4 people) to the destruction of Wei and the founding of Fu.


This magazine delves into the "Taheiki" system, which was the basis of "Knights of Valor," and contains an introductory article about the game that served as a reference for the completion of "Taheiki." This is a special issue that approaches the work from a slightly different perspective and perspective from the conventional command magazine.

This is a Japanese-Language item and includes no English components unless noted in the condition note.