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Title: | Nintendo Game Systems |
Notice: | Please enter Super NES notes in Yuppy::Super_NES. |
Moderator: | RUSURE::EDP |
|
Created: | Tue Oct 20 1987 |
Last Modified: | Mon Feb 03 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 847 |
Total number of notes: | 11602 |
462.0. "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" by SANFAN::GRANT_JO (Don't Say 'Shank') Tue May 15 1990 17:59
I did a dir/title on this one and found nothing. If
I've missed it, by all means please move this note.
Now - is anyone else out there playing this game? I wish
edp would get it and enter a review because he really
does it right. I can't say much about this game because
there is too much to say.
Suffice it to say that it is similar to (and made by the
same manufacture as) Genghis Kahn. (see seperate note
in this conference) It is a history/strategy game. If
you only like games where you whack monsters with swords
and stuff (and I do like those games as well) you won't
like this game. Is it a total command mode game in which
you assume the persona of one of a number of 2nd century
Chinese warlords and attempt to unify the country. Through
conquest, of course.
There are five scenarios from which to choose and I am
still, after approx. 60 hours, working through the first
scenario. The game consists of managing the provinces
under your control (58 provinces total) by making a
choice per province per month. (the game moves chronologically,
beginning, in this scenario, in January, AD 189) Some of
the choices are: develop the land, give food to peasants
or gold or book to a general, move a general, go to war,
try to strike a diplomatic deal (give a gift, negotiate an
alliance, marry one of your daughters, borrow rice) arm
your troops, buy or sell rice, transfer rice and/or gold
between your provinces, search a province for an unattached
("free") general to recurit, recruit a general from another
warlod (by giving him money, or a horse, or through a personal
visit - but your warlord could die if he goes too far on
the visit) and so on and so on. Talk about complex!
But it is a dynamite and addicting game and I give it a
10 on a scale of 10. Some general tips follow:
[spoilers follow]
Use the 'save' option creatively. You naturally do this when you
put the game away for the day, but it helps to do a save before
you do something potentially risky like going to war, recruiting
a general deep in hostile territory. I also use it when I
have just recruited a new general and his loyalty is very low.
The danger exists that he will be recruited before you get a
chance to give him gold and increase his loyalty. So I do
a few saves while I'm getting to the new general's province. If
someone recurits him I push the reset button, load the old data
and - voila! - I've got my general back. If you get hit by
plague or flood or locusts - no problem! The reset button
saves your bacon.
About battles - very tough to win as the attacker because the
enemy generals get into their castles and start setting fires.
When you're hit, better move on the next turn or you'll lose
the general and all his troops. Watch the wind direction on
every turn, because it changes. The fires spread and you can
get trapped in a corner and fried.
Direct the battles yourselves, because the computer is too
bull-headed to do a good job. It'll keep hammering in
situations where a little discretion will go a long way.
My best successes have come when I have either had overwhelming
numbers or when I have invaded the same territory on successive
turns, whittling them down each time. Bring as many generals
with naval capacity as you can. Without that capability, you'll
bring along a general who, unable to cross some river, will sit
out the action.
The easiest way to achieve victory (given the 30-day battle limit)
is to burn out the enemy from their castles and occupy them. It
is therefore important to check how many castles the province
you're going to invade has, and bring along at least that many
generals, plus an additonal one to guard your rice.
Finally, do detailed periodic searches on all your generals. Your
general, on the summary screen, may show a loyalty factor of
100. But a detailed select on that general might show that his
troops have very low loyalty and that you must give the guy some
gold. Or face the possibility of revolt, which means you'll have
to hit the reset button....
Joel
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